THE n A I L Y NB BR ASK AN UNDEft CLASSES HAVE MEETINGS The Daily Nebraskan ..Contributing Editor Percy Spencer ..Associate Editor Doris Slater ...Associate Editor A. J. Covert llllllllllllllll Jean Burroughs J. A. Cejnar Charles Peterson Era Miller W. L. Sase Margnerite Kauffman Frank Barnett Reportorlal Staff Clara Schulte Cuy Moates John Kyle C. I Jone John Wen.3 -and Joe C. Flaherty Edward Weaver Dorothy Ellsworth Geneva Chesley Aileen Ebennan A. H. Jensen Ivan Beede Cloy Hohson ..Business Manager U. S. Harkson 's'st Business Manager K B Scott . Jswr satsfs&s rat FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15. 1913 And now they are poinp to try to make University Hall look voting by fixing it a coat of preen paint. CAPS FOR ALL Someone has suggested that pwfcaMy the Freshmen would wear their green caps if the other classmen also wore class eaPs. Such a suggestion is in keeping with the situation and we fee, confident that if it would help to better establish the green cap tradition many of the upper classmen would not hesitate to join the throng Why not then, have the Seniors wear a white, felt crusher, the Juniors "a scarlet headgear and the Sophomores, whatever was ap propriate. If those in authority had ever thought that the library would be so crowded they would no doubt have built a larger one. The -full house" is an indication of prosperity anyway. AND AS YET " nd as yet we have no suitable room where male students may congregate," savs the editor of "Student Life," the official organ of Washington University of St. Ixmis. It is in order to add that the male Comhuskers have been thinking the same thing for a long time. Yes, a school in the south has a "Yi-Ki-Ki" club. But how long will they have the most novel name? One great desire of many students will now be fulfilled they will be able to hear and see 44 Billy" Sunday. THAT LUNCHEON In order to have everything in ship shape for the "Football Luncheon" a week from tomorrow noon, the girls are allowing no delay. Nothing like an early start. HOUSEKEEPING COURSE University of Washington Gives Prac tical Study Five-Room Cottage Located on Campus University of Washington, Oct 15. Theoretical and semi-practical study of housekeeping at the University of Washington is to be supplemented shortly by actual practice in home management in a five-room cottage on tie campus. Girls studying home eco nomics will become residents in the cottage for periods of two months or so, and will be instructed in the arts of the housekeeper. Not more than four or five girls will SOPHOMORES HAVE ABOUT SEV-ENTY-FIVE ON HAND OLYMPICS MUCH DISCUSSED Minor Officer Elected Freshman Try-Outa for Wrestler nd Boxer to Be Held on Wednesday The regular meeting of the Sopho more class was held yesterday morn ing in Law 101. with Everett Angle in the chair. About seventy were pres ent. The order of the day was the election of the following: Vice Tresident Edith Yungblut Secretary Catherine Dodge, Treasurer Tod Cobby. Sergeant-at-Arms John Wenstrand. fter the election, Lloyd Tully, the chairman of the Olympic committee, spoke concerning the Olympic and the strenuous task that confront the Sophomores. Three hundred members of the Freshman class met for the first time yesterday to elect minor officers and provide plans for the Olympics, wun the following results: Vice President Helen KendalL of Superior. Secretary Mary Helen Allenswortn, of Lincoln. Treasurer James Copeland, of Fair- bury. Sergeant-at-Arms Walter C John son, of Omaha, Try-outs for the wrestlers and box ers will be held in the Armory next Wednesday evening from 7 to 9 o'clock. The divisions are: below 1S5 pounds, lightweight; 135 to 160 pounds, mid dleweight, and over 160 pounds, heavy weight. The Olympics and the tug- of-war will be held on Salt Creek "bot tom." Forty men will compose the teams for push ball and the tng-of-war. be able to reside in the house at one time, but by careful rotation, all of those registering for the course in home making will be given an oppor tunity for experimentation in the management of the cottage, and their achievements will be studied by the class as a whole. Home decoration will occupy that at tention of the students during their early residence in the cottage, and from that they will go to the planning of meals and supervision of general housework, under the constant direc tion of a member of the home econom ics faculty, Miss Francis Haverlo. SEE Our New "Sorority" Bracelet (Sterling Silver) HALLETT UM JEWELER Estb. 1S71 1143 O Observatory Open The observatory and the telescope will be available lo the public on Fri day evening, October 15. for a view of the moon. There wil also be a short talk with lantern slides at 8 o'clock, and this custom will be fol lowed throughout the winter. The first lecture will be on "The Starry Heav ens,' before and after which the tele scope will be in use. Eut if the evening is cloudy, the date will be postponed and announced at the prop er time. Music Louis P. Hagensick, F2042. Raising the Dairy Calf The best practices in the care and management of the young dairy stock are discussed in Bulletin 149, just issued by the Xebraska Agricultural Experiment Station. ""Raising the Dairy Calf" is the title of this bul letin. The author has endeavored to give explicit directions for the suc cessful feeding of the skim milk calf in the hope that more dairy calves will be raised in Nebraska, The author discusses the need of more dairy calves ana the kind oi calves it pays to raise, the feed re quired to raise a calf, the best meth ods of feeding skim milk, grain, hay, and silage, and the prevention or treatment of calf scours. Practical rations are given for calves of differ ent ages. This bulletin may be obtained free by any resident of Nebraska upon ap plication to the Agricultural Experi ment Station, Lincoln, E. A. Burnett, Director. Swimming Class Assured Sixty-seven girls have signed for the iwimraing class. The class will meet at the -city Y. M. C. A. pool on Tues days from 10 nntil 1 o'clock, and will be .supervised by Miss Ina Gittingh, Miss Dorothy Baldwin and Miss Marie Clark. A Thrilling Moving Picture Serial "The Diamond from the Sky, one of the most interesting, exciting and entertaining moving picture serials, will begin at the Alpine picture theatre, lSSO O street, October 20 and 21 and continue every Wednesday and Thursday thereafter for twenty weeks. Every student should see this $800,000 photoplay. Admission only 5 cent. A cash prize of $10,000 will be paid to the person who submits the xaost ac ceptable suggestion for a sequel to The Diamond from the Sky. Begin at the first chapter, October 20 and 21, enjoy the entire series, submit your suggestion and win the prize. The Al pine picture theatre. 3220 O street Only S cents. 11-24 4 f J I lV. I t mm - a m c on BLUFF ran' boast are props for a weak case. 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