SUNDAY. MAKC1I F TW0 THE DAILY MKASKAN . . ,lm - Daily Nebraskan Station A. Lincoln. Nebraska OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Enteied as second-class matter at tht; postoffice in Lincoln. Nebraska under act of congress, March 3. 1879 and at special rate ot postage provided for m section 1103. act ot October i 1917. authorized January 20. 1922. Published Tuesday. Wednesday, Thurs day. Friday and Sunday mornings during the academic vear. Single Copy 5 cents THIRTY-SECOND YEAR sMLZMBERr SEBRgiaESUTOSI This .'Mr is renres'nti'il for peroral mlvertis ini; by the Nebraska Press Ass orialion. $2 a year $1.25 a semester $3 a year mailed $1.75 semester Mailed SUBSCRIPTION RATE Under diiection of the Student Pub hcation Board Editorial Otnce University Hall 4. Business Office University Hall 4. Telephones Day . B6b91; Night. Bt882 or B3333 (Journal) ask for Neb' at- kan editor. EDITORIAL STAFF Ed it oi -m -Chief Phil Bi owi . MANAGING EDITORS Dick Moran Lynn Leonard NEWS EDITORS George Murpny Lamoine Bible Violet Cross Sports Editor Burton Marvin Society Editor Carolyn Van Anda Woman's Ed'ter. . . Margaret I -ieie BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager.. .Chalmers Grah.im ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGERS Bernard Jennings George Holyoke FranK Musgrave Uhletics For the Students. "THK Columbia Spectatoi last tall raised a rumpus over the charges it mail? that football play ns were being subsidized by the university. As a result ot these charges a committee was ap pointed to investigate the situa tion. The committee has just j f we can't arouse the campus brought in a report that the about anything else, perhaps we hargt-s were unfounded and the could start a controversy about the flayers are not favored by salaries, new spring hat.s for women. An- dents who desire to get physical education on their own initiative. yI" aiv not advocating that the university buy up a lot oi lanu for use by students, or that a lot of equipment be purchased. Ob viously that is impossible. But it is not impossible that the facilities now available should be made more generally useful to students not members of athletic teams or those takine nhvsical education courses. When the basketball team is practicing in the coliseum, it sepTiis harrilv necessarv that no - - - - other students can use basketballs to play on the other courts. When the tennis courts are open, it seems hardly necessary that the coeds should monopolize them for their foolish antics which can hardly be called tennis. When the swim ming pool is built by student fees, it hardly seems just that the men's and women's physical education departments should use most of the time to conduct their classes and then refuse to heed the stu dents' pleas that what little time is left be used for swimming by men and women students at the same time. A little money from the athletic department might well be diverted to opening tennis courts for the I use of all students. A little more J money might be used to put in : stock some swimming suits for men so that the pool could be used by men and women at the same . time. j The lettermen and the physical ! education depaitments have a ; right to use Nebraska's athletic facilities but not to monopolize them. inecure jobs, or scholarships. But tho finding the athletic sit uation technically above reproach Ihe committee pointed out a num ber of conditions which it consid ns unhealthy. These conditions it finds are partly a result of the overemphasis placed upon athlet ics of the spectacular nature as compared with athletics for the students as a whole. The criti cisms drawn are valuable because they apply not only to Columbia university but to nearly every uni versity in the country including Nebraska. "The facilities for healthful out door exercise are not only insuf licient for the entire university body, but are inadequate even for the undergraduate body of 1,800 students in Columbia college," the leport says. More practice fields, a new gymnasium, development and use of equipment for the benefit of more than just the ex pcit players was recommended by the committee. . T Nebraska the situation is similar, even worse. What meagre facilities art available are ued almost exehi.-ively by ath letic teams or by ( lasses in physi cal education. The stadium is im piactical for use by anyone ex cept the football team and the tiack team. The- coliseum is quite largely used by the athletic teams; and the classes in physical educa tion. The swimming pool is fairly well monopolized by classes. The other "straw" ballot might be sponsored by the Nebraskan. Any how we know of one vigorous negative vote for the skypieces. A Deadline That Is a Deadline. "T"HE Nebraskan likes to poke fun at the Cornhusker for its nu merous and ever receding dead lines. But this Jime the deadline cannot be extended. When the Cornhusker sales close sometime in the near future they will really close. Always there are a few students who wail loudly around the Corn husker office in the spring when the books are distributed, trying to get a copy somehow or other. The Cornhusker has to figure closely in order to make expenses. Every book that isn't sold is just so much loss. It is theiefore im possible for them to print extra copies beyond the number actually sold. Students should not expect them to do so. As for the value of the book, that is an individual matter of de cision. But when the books are distributed in the spiing, we'll bet our copy of the Cornhusker against somebody else's desire for one, that the value of the look will jump about 80 pcicent in the minds ol a lot of students who don't haw them. This is not a sales talk lot the Cornhusker, but it is a len.indcr to those who ate dubious about the Coinhuskcr deadline, that live tenn.s courts dining the day fair ly j hlit oing to be woith ju.-t teem with the green-bioomei ed J as nuch in two months as it is coeds who are compelled to take ' now. And so lar as the Coinhuskcr physical education. J i concerned live bucks is woith a Th-re is no land on the campus j.y "f the book now, and it won't available for use by students lor vat ions kinds of sports;. The in tiamural program, we admit, has been well worked out and takes t are of a large number of .students who enjoy sports for sport's sake. be woith that two months Horn now or in fact any time alter this week. .ol the Victory llul the (tame.'' But the facilities for students who j JM:BKASKA completed its hi. like to play when and how they desire are practically nil. And .Mich as they are they are monopol ized by the teams and the classes. The Nebraskan is vigorously op posed to compulsory physical edu cation. But it does believe that provision should be made where at !1 p'v.'riIe to accommodate stu- ketball season Satuiday night without a very impressive record so far as games won are con cerned. Naturally it would have been fine if the team could have won the Big Six championship, but it is doubtfui if the games played at home, partcularly durng the lat ter half of the season could have been much more enjoyable than they were. The team improved consistently thruout the season. The players set a good example to the specta tors, who haven't been very apt pupils, of how to keep cool and unemotional in the face of discour aging breaks. The games were fairly close and always exciting. There is little more than can or should be asked of an athletic team. There is a motto carved on the front of the Nebraska stadium which includes something to the effect that it is not the victory but the game that counts. That is sup posed to be the ideal of athletic contests. We hopo it is. The most surprising thing about the Boettcher kidnaping case was the fact that the family still had $60,000 to pay as ransom. If the police of the country can't prevent kidnaping, maybe the bank mora torium will. oooooooooooo O gi O Hotel . O O D'Hamburger O O O O O O SHOT-GUN SERVICE 1141 Q St. 1718 0 St. oooooooooooo THE ONLY ANSWER IS THE CORNHUSKER IS KEEP ING FAITH. THE 1933 YEAR BOOK REMAINS THE SAME LARGE, BEAUTIFUL VOLUME THE QUALITY IS SUPERIOR THROUGHOUT A BOOTH IN S. S. A SALESMAN EVERYWHERE 0 0 o o o Q n