TWO THE DAILY NEBRASKAN THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1031. Daily Nebraskati Btatfon A. Lincoln, Nebtatka. OFFICIAL. TUDliNT PUBLICATION UNIVKBSITV OF NEBRASKA Thlt paper ) repreaented for oeneral advartlilna oy Nabraeka Praaa Auoclatlon. MEMBEK 193 4 f irurr Yla MPf rapreatntae) far fanaraj arfvartlalng by tha Nabraeka Praaa Aaeoclatlor) griatflM goltfoinrf $rf Ent.rtd aa aecond-elaaa mattar at tha P"0",c7,Jn Lincoln! Nabraaka, und.r act ,f "nore.., March J. 1879. Vct'orM? ,rif,v.tv:hoprrrxv.rJdn,s.ryn4o. I.B. Pub TULHdi.r., rn-.y Sunday mornlnga during the academic yaar. Editorial Off lea Unlverelty Hal 4. Itt. B3333 (Jour rial). Aak for Nebratkan "tor- EDITORIAL STAFF dHor.,BXhf Burton Marvin ?A0,N " Flaehtr J .... ,rW'n ....Woman'. Editor tirth Mataehullat Society Editor ancha Kllbourna Sporta Editor Arnold Lavlna ".'YaVir'''' h . BU8,NE8S TAF.F..Bu.ln... M.n.Q.r Truman Obarndorff Robert Fun Support The Players! THIS week the University Players arc making a 4 light for continued high class productions. As Xinooln'a outstanding stage company, as a service to student body of the university, as a medium of txpresslon for students of dramaUcs. and as ser wtl Tof the university they are appealing to the JSllo. particularly the student body, for continued Jt in the annual University Players ticket sales drive, which started Wednesday. jL Tassels, women's pep club. Is handling thl drive With Its usual enthusiasm, and hopes to rout last year', success. Until Monday evening rtrteat. will be offered tickets at a low price, and by iwrchaaing these season tickets can assure them-SToTS-clas. entertainment thru-out the Ltudent. in the university and citizens rf Umooln fall to realize the prominent poslUon oc rated by the university's own company of players. S University Player, represent the cultural side J? IbTcampui contribute greatly to the cultural Hre c each student coming in contact with the or SateatlonT and offer first class entertainment to TSi of Lincoln.. Those who doubt the truth this last statement should witness the fact teat Talbot, former Lincoln acior ana m. I fiin, fame, has expressed the desire to ap Srwlth the Players In a production this year and nuTbeen cast In a role for one of the current sea- " StSThlt. from Broadway have been played consistently by University Player casts to audioes of appreciative student, and residents of Lincoln. But Mil far too many students fail to avail them selve. of the opportunity of viewing ' quality producticiis in the Temple theater. Self-to-M taould delate to every one attending the unl verrtty that be must attend the eight plays this year, one of which is a Shakespearian work. Because of the boom occurring of late in the UrtOmate stage field thru-out the country, the May management, confident that the people of Unooln will re-pond with their support, plans KMier smash hlU than ever before. In the Thurs STidition of the Nebraskan i. a list of fifteen pro motions from which eight will be selected to be ttagwd by the Player, this year. Havin-T completed elaborate plans for the cur Bt wason, the Players are depending on students to wpport them more than ever before. If th s stu dents fail to offer and guarantee their support by -srebartng ticket, during the next few days, the gyTwlll be unable to maintain their present high standards. Student, are you willing to help yourselves to Mao rare entertainment, and will you loyally sup MKt an outstanding campus organization? If you a,eea Tassel, and buy a University Player, sea son ticket hit ' Theraf'are a number of students arriving on the campus a week before registration who are not concerned with fraternity or sorority rushing. These students are looking for Jobs to earn their way at university. Some will secure satisfactory places m which they will earn their room or board while other, will not be so fortunate. A. these ambitious youths strive to help them aelvea many ask the question, "Is it worth it?" During the period when college education was restricted to the privileged minority, the children of wealthy parents, higher education was considered the lone key to success. Later, state universities afforded the children of the working an opportunity to attend college. They found that four year, of study gave them a tremendous advantage over a high school graduate in obtaining a position with a fan income, and ratistlc. .till indicate that If the unlverrfty graduate doe. get a Job he advances more rapidly and farther than the individual whose education is completed In the secondary schools. However, during the present period of Job scarcity, student, consider the cultural values of education a. much as they do the Job-getting ad vantage It U in considering the latter factor that the question of "Is it worth It?" la brought forward. r-it f Bracken, director of the bureau of employment, rrtio in the working rtudenf. greatest aid, doe. not agree with the common belief that the student who "work. W. way" get. more from his university eductioc He U of the opinion that the working student mim ta hl" cnege arar becu fc tisis It dlfflsolt to participate fc, atudent activities, Thi. loss Is quite obvious and It Is a great one. The natural conclusion would be that since the wo-king student 1. not diverted from his study by outside activity he would make better grades. However, even If the general grades of th. working .,, mrm hf-her In some case, there is no defin ite indication "tit he receive, more benefit from lis study. rrofeJSuf. and Instructors sometimes ay t'je working student solicits their sympathy to f-cn-e trades. Many studeota who forced to ? -t their a .--'tnent Vcsuse of having to work s . ; . .r . r time, which may Interfere with , h'u'v - :!!, seek to avoid grades by ap - - to t' lr-'ncy of their Instructors. In in . , gf t the working student Is the loser. These are the losses of the student who has to support himself. What are his gains? Probably the greatest gain that can be named is the preparation and training he receives for com petition in the outside world. It is easily seen that the working student is striving againa heavy odds while he is attending school and this will undoubt edly strengthen and develop his abilities to a far greater extent than the student who receives his al lowance from home. The working student receives admiration, re spect, and understanding, and he needs all three be cause they may help to answer the question, "Is It worth it?" The Dally I Mini. Scanning Our Campus. jyjANIACAL Barney Oldfields of the Nebraska campus, intent on terrorizing innocent pedestri ans on north 12th. street now find their hands tied, unless they have a yen for incarceration in the city Jail. The Administration has placed stop buttons on that erstwhile speedway between Social Sciences and the Armory. Such action is a fine safety meas ure. The buttons, however, are so placed that stu dents will walk across the grass on the parking of 12th. street, thus stamping out that which has found life so hard this summer. Why can't the buttons be planted where the sidewalk meets the street? To students returning to this campus from burned-out parts of the state, university lawns look like oases. Care-takers have gone to commendable extremes in keeping the campus beautiful. Lincoln citizens found the grounds north of administration building one of the coolest spots in the city this summer. Another improvement that should have and still should be made on this campus is renovation and some sort of surfacing of the road north of the en gineering buildings. It is an abominable eyesore. The fact that Nebraska's highway testing labora tories are housed Just south of this road Is ironi cal, to say the least Optimism Is Reinstated. air of rare optimism is prevalent in adminis tative quarters and among student groups on the Nebraska campus today. Registration ia. ris ing for the first time in several years, soys the ad ministration, and that statement may be fact. One is led to believe its authenticity upon hearing of the extension of the registration period over an addi tional day. Sudden announcement Wednesday afternoon that no classes will be held Thursday took every one except the administration by surprise. For sev eral weeks officials have been quietly predicting that registration was due to experience an up swing. Soon observers will know the final facts. It seems that largely responsible for this re versal are 1 Federal aid FERA' and Corn-Hog loans; 2 added desire for education prompted by depression, and 3 the feeling on the part of some new students that they might as well come to school as loaf, if they can possibly do so. It is doubtful if this latter attitude is commendable, but it is a fact that it exists. However this announcement of extension of registration time may not imply all that the un observing reader is inclined to believe. Time al lotted to registration activities this year was short ened considerably by the school officials. They probably bit off more than they could chew, one-day facilities possibly being inadequate for handling a group no larger than the small ones of this depres sion period. But there is no doubt that registra tion of freshmen has risen this year. Congestion in the Coliseum was regrettably bad thru-out the day Wednesday. Lack of direc tions and instructions left many of the newcomers to the campus confused as to what they were to do. Entrances were used as exits, exits served as en trances. The . complexity of the whole proceeding certainly is puzzling to freshmen. CONTEMPORARY COMMENT Are We Being Educated? As thousands of young men and women pre pare to enter universities during the next few days parents, educators, graduates and undergraduates critically analyze our educational system to deter mine whether or not it teaches a man to think and to exercise and develop his faculties. The Carnegie Foundation which several years ago made a report on college athletics that caused many university authorities to stop and ponder has completed another critically constructive survey called "A Study of the Relations of Secondary and Higher Education." This survey lasted six years and included the t state universities, privately en dowed colleges, technical institutions and high schools of Pennsylvania, Since the purpose of this study was to deter mine the value of a college education in May, 1928, 27,000 seniors about to graduate from high schools in the state of Pennsylvania were given certain tests. In October of that year 49 colleges were asked to follow throughout their college career, with similar tests, all students who had been tested in high school. The findings of this study are sensational. John R. Tunis writing in Scribner's for September says, "If you are one of those who spent four years of life', brief span in an American university, you will be saddened when you learn what has passed for education In our great land. I doubt whether you will be surprised. "If you are attending college to receive an edu cation you will be surprised! By comparing the scores of the tests the students made as freshmen with those made when they were seniors It was found that in subjects such as spelling and litera ture, they knew more in thiir freshman year. In the general culture test 30 per cent of the seniors were below the freshman average." This embarrassing survey also discovered that the average senior In six colleges recognized only 61 words out of 100 words "In familiar use by educated people," as compared with 58 recognized by freshmen. One senior knew but 23 words out of 100. When condition, such a. these are revealed there must be something wrong with the system of . econdary and higher education. Who Is to blame? The Carnegie Foundation places the re sponsibility on the so-called credit system. These tens .bowed that it didn't matter how often a student "took a course" if he didn't think about the subject matter for himself. University professor are quita aware of the attitude of the majority of students who feel that they are through with a subject for good as soon as they receive a passing mark. Once a course is "taken" there is a desire to forget it as soon as possible. In one college It was discovered that a young woman about to receive a magna cum laude degree took a test and stood fifth from the bottom in a class of 48, and in the lowest 10 per cent of the state. This young woman was a "smoothie" who knew how to "tube" her instructors and take courses that were easy. The course credit system has been spoken of as the automat of American education. A student puts in a coin, a certain number of hours a week. Into the slot and automatically he receives a credit for the course. As. long as the course credit system exists in the American universities and colleges it will be difficult to educate students who have learned how "to take and forget" courses during the four years of high school. Dally llllnl. 1 CA8INE J MENDERS MEET SATURDAY NIGHT Officers Launch Program of Welcome for New Men Students. Starting; with an informal sup per for cabinet members in the YMCA rooms in the Temple build ing Saturday evening at 6 o'clock, th YMCA has inaugurated it. program of welcome for new men students on me campus, v,. u. Hayes, general secretary, and Charles Hulac, president, have planned a complete program for the organization during me pum. week. Ray Kinch is president of the Ag college YMCA organiza tion. Freshman men interested in YMCA membership and meetings t invited hv the cabinet to eo on a freshman retreat to Camp Kin- .. ... . i n a nn nikinnik near Valparaiso oepi. x-j anrt an Ac rolleee men will hold their annual retreat for first year students at the same place Oct. 6 and 7. Another activitp sponsored by the association was a stag party for Ag freshmen at 8 p. m., Wednesday Sept. 19, in the Ag college Student Activities building. Taurine the vear reeular Wed nesday night meetings of the city campus iMCA are neio in me rooms in the Temple building. ENROLLMENT GAIN CAUSE OP ACTION (Continued from Page 1.) logues they stood waiting for their chance to see tne assignment com mittee. On the coliseum stage they filled out class cards, paid tneir fees and were directed to a side room to be photographed as the last step in registration. Camera men were takine "mufrs" at the rate of nearly two a minute during the morning. Wparv nerformers and deans nmiM sef tin lpt-un in their work as students continued to form lines the length of the 200-foot coliseum floor, waiting for assignment com mittee cards. Classes were con stantly being closed as sections filled. At the.extreme end or tne building, Dr. A. R. Congdon, chair man nf the assieiment committee, would climb on a box and, using an improvised megapnone, snmit oi the numbers of closed sections to advisors over t' 'oor. "Departments had not provided for this rush to register," Dr. Congdon said with a worried smile. "Suddenly classes are filled up and professors are forced to raise their limits on number of students or add emergency courses to their schedules. Profs Order Box Lunches. Advisors and helpers found the lunch hour crowded out, and at 11 o'clock, doors were shut against more comers. Box lunches were ordered by the dozen for faculty members who hoped to be able to be thru the line of student, in time for another rush at one o'clock. Wuth but one day of registration this year as compared with the two days of past years, compara tive figures were hard to obtain. In 1933, 1,776 students had regis tered in the spring and paid their fees during the summer, as com pared with the 2,056 who had com pleted their registration during the summer of 1934. In 1933, when there were two days of registra tion, 1,096 students completed their registration the first day and 964 the second day. The total regis tration at the end of the first week last year was 3,985 and the total collegiate registration for the first semester was 5.075. Working until late Tuesday night, the assignment committee checked the registration forma of 758 students who had started their registration during freshmman day. Last year they checked some what more than 500 forms. Classes will start at 8 a. m. Fri day. Graduate students will have until October 6 to complete their registration and students at the medical college in Omaha will register Friday. TASSELS CONDUCT TICKET CAMPAIGN (Continued from Page 1.) tra," "Come What May," "Dods worth," "Nine Pine Street." New Seats in Theater. In addition to a finer group of plays the Players also have a few more attractions to offer the pub lic. Included among these is the entire renovation of the Temple theater with new seats. Murals depicting the growth of drama from its primitive stages until the present day also add greatly to the appearance of the auditorium. Due to the fact that they lost very few actors and actresses be cause of graduation, the Players will offer a much more experi enced and capable group of actors than has been seen in Lincoln for a number of years. Armand Hun- You'll Be Having Some Garments To Clean send them to the old reliable Modern Cleaners. For Qual ity, Service and reasonable charges they are hard to equal. Modern Cleaners Soukup A Westover "30th Year In Lincoln" Call F2377 For Service. These Fascinating New Points on vVv Suede ore imorl . . . o ore ihe new fabric P on( '0,he, Bfown end Green ore v -i-,. favorites . . . theie ond more ore j ' v " e (ah'O"-r'0n' points to be seen here. Jocqvelim makn fhi tmort pump of I brown tud with baiga ititcfcflg ... r1 jfc J B I V , v. L)Z oft1 brawn May makm INi Connta f I v" V -vicw r pwmp' Abc h bodi' A fltw oepvaftna itrop avyta In btach 'li' -'r . w . J tvada with light ttttchine. Yaw may fk-'s' ... . t Vj? Conoia matat goM atao-at atyla i PS '"f TiV LfO bloea tvada with narraw caM A "high riding" lit of brown tvada OltS' ' with biown eolljkin. In bloc wad ote coQa'f' Si wf: j 455 1 1 A now Connia alap-h tl black mada with tongua and itrapa o fotftkm. k..-,. ,-..... . j ter, genial leading man of last year's shows, is back. Dwight Perkins, labelled as the "year's greatest discovery" last season will also continue his work with the Players. Perkins plays juve nile roles. Lyle Talbot May Appear. Another outstanding attraction which the Players may offer this year will, be the guest star ap pearance of Lyle Talbot, Nebras ka's own, direct from Hollywood. Talbot may do a show here during the middle of January or the first part of February The time de pends upon a satisfactory arrange ment with the motion picture con tract. Team Captain. The Tassel drive teams are headed by Gladys Klopp, Elizabeth Shearer, Elizabeth Bushee, Mary Edith Hendricks, and Alaire The drive teams of the Tassels are: Team No. 1. Gladys Klopp, cap aln; Helen Runkel, Mildred Miller, Gertrude Fontain, Marga ret Riisness, Cale Caley, Marga ret Phlllippe, Betty Beck, Bash Perkins, Mary Relmers, Goraine Crawford, Laura McAllister, Helen Shelledy. Team No. 2. Elizabeth Shearer, captain; Erma Baure, Maxim Whisler, Jean Hoag, Elizabeth Moomaw, Clover Beckman, Cyn- Sv money and rent our Rood ear. We claim the lowest rates in tha United Statei. Established 15 yeari. Can held by request until p. m. without charge. Always open. Motor Out Company 1120 P Street. BUSK. thla Peddley, Barbara Barber, Eleanor Neale, Koma De Brown, Frances Brune, Adele Rombrlnk, Virginia Pitchford. 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