THE HESPERIAN STUDENT HESPERIAN STUDENT, Issued BiMiil.tnonllilv bv the Hespehian Student Publishing Association of tho University of Nebraska i EDITORS: 0. 8. ALLEN, CniBF; A.G.WARNER; S. D. KILLEN; ' C. G.MoMILLAN; Wm. OWEN JONES. HURINES8 Manaoeii, - - - J. It. Fokbk. TKIIMS.OF SlinRClUI'TION : One copy, per college your One copy, one balf year, Single copy Single Copy, to Members of Association ADVKHTI81NO HATES ON APPLICATION. $1.00 .no .10 .0.-5 All communications should be adilicsseii to the Hes pkiuan Student. State University, Lincoln, Nebraska. PltKBS OK TIIE UNlVKItSITY PniNTINQ COMPANY. jilitorial oie, Numerous constitutional amendments and an un contested election have at last done their perfect or imperfect work, and have placed this paper under the management of aboard of five editors, who have been elected for the calender year of '85. In enter ing upon their work they would make no promises and offer no apologies. That the Student can and ought to be improved goes without saying that the new ed itors are willing to do all they can to help towards this end may possibly indicate but little; that they are capable of achieving the measure of success that the U. of N. is justified in demanding is not a thing for them to claim in the initial number, but a thing for them to prove if haply it can be proved by the character of this, and of each succeeding issue. "Does it cost the state two thousand dollars a year for each student that takes the agricultural course?" This was the question asked by one of Nsb rasska's industrious legislators, and a committee was promptly appointed to find out. We have not yet been summoned to testify, but we would like to suggest that Nebraska is not alone in finding an industrial school an expensive luxury. To be sure there has not been enough spent on ours to show as yet whether it could amount to anything or not; and what has been granted it, has been in such a dribbling, stingy way that it was impossible to expend it in the most advantageous manner But local bungling aside, it is still true that a creature half laboring man and half scientist has been found ne of the most expensive of all domestic animals to rear. He who merely theorizes about industrial col leges has ever had a most delightful and exhilerating task; but the unfortunate man who has laboriously attempted to put these splendid theories into prac tice has been confronted by some of the most difficult educational problems of the day. Dean Bessey in his inaugural, said that an industrial school should not teach theories but such things only as are positivly known; and that experiments that self interest would lead individuals to undertake, should not be under taken by the state. Thus limited (and the limita tions are surely wise, an industrial college becomes little but a scientific school where experiments in the natural sciences and instruction in the same arc the principal part of the work performed. But such an institution bears no more resemblance to what the averge man understands by an industrial school than a telascope bears to a plow. As yet, then, we believe that the most important experiment which this or any other industrial college can undertake, is the all im portant one the object of which is to determine the best method of conducting this class of schools. Such an experiment is necessarily expensive, and will require an, as yet, undetermined amount of money and of time; but if the knowlege sought can be eventually obtained it is an experiment that in the . fullest sense of the word, will pay. Some of the members of our faculty who have come recently from eastern colleges are peculiarly horri fied at the style of literary composition to which our students are addicted. The professor who is burdened with rhetoricals says that writers make too hard work of preparing an essay or an oration. They read everything they can concerning the subject they are to write upon, then they groan and worry and perspire in a herculean attempt to unearth some original idea, and at last they clumsily spin such thought as they have been able to accumulate, into a bundle of verbal shoe-strings that spread themselves over the paper in a dreary labyrinth of bad penmanship. The charge is true, and, in a measure, we glory in its truth. That is, we would rather be , clumsy than effeminate, and would rather that our efforts should make us awkward than that elegance should be obtained through acqui escence in our own stupidity. The tendency of col lege life is too often towards self-satisfied mediocrity. When a student tries to do something specially good, he often succeeds only in getting himself laughed at, and he is in the future tempted to. be satisfied with perfecting himself in the mediocre. Even the organi -zations kept up entirely by the students in our mod ern colleges, show an inclination to so train the indi vidual that he may be able to avoid ridicule, rather than to command admiration. Pruning is a veiy M (0 m