SUMMER SCHOOL NEBRASKAN SUMMER SCHOOL HEBRASKAN Editor and Manager. . . . A. R. Swenson Associate Editor C llay Gates Reportorial Staff V. W. Wilson Leonard VV. Troestcr K. W. Smith Bdsar Boshult J. H. Moseley J. E. ,Morgan Alberta Ackley Florence Dunn Office of Student Activities, Basement Administration. Hall, Phone B2597 Published tri weekly, on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays during the Summer Session, by the Student Publi cation Board. SONNETS OF A PESSIMIST With Friday's issue. The Nebraskan plans to begin a department for the students of the Teachers' College High School. With its attendance of nearly one hundred and fifty, this school brings the total Summer School attendance near the one thousand mark. This is far larger than any previous year and shows the rapid growth of Nebraska university. Attendance at convocation so far this summer has not been nearly as large as it should be. It seems strange that students should deliber ately pass up opportunities for cul ture through lectures and entertain ments arranged for them by the uni versity, free of charge, when during the rest of the year they would glad ly pay for entertainments and lec tures which cannot compare with these in value. The lecture of Dr. Howard, last Monday, on "The New Humanism" was fairly well attended, but it should have been heard by every student of the summer session, especially by those in the teaching profession. The same is true of the lecture on Brazil by Professor Persinger. The university and the city of Lin coln offer many opportunities for cu1 ture besides the regular curriculum work. 'The latter should, of course, come first, but the student who 6huts himself off from all other interests is missing a vital part of his educa tion. If we are to have convocation at all, at least a majority should at tend. If the voluntary system fails to secure this, why not make attend ance compulsory? The quadrennial political spectacle is being staged once more for the American people. If the teachers of Nebraska are in reality, as they should he, the leaders in political as well as other lines of thought, they should take advantage of their presence at the university to widen their political knowledge by study and interchange of opinions. One serious political fault from which the student seems less free than he should be is the lack of open-mindedness. Too many adopt the expressed doctrines of a cer tain political organization and modify the new facts which inay come un der their observance to suit their doc trine, rather than modify their doc trine to suit the fact. It would be beneficial in securing a sane discussion of the political is sues of the day if student political clubs were formed by the democrats and by the republicans in the sum mer session to say nothing of the followers past and present of the in domitable colonel. I. Of Poetry-with-a-Purpote When I consider how much time it takes, And how much patience, effort, force of will Are spent on verse and meter, indif ferent, good or ill, And badly turned, and how much nain it makes The friendly reader, who, in blind confusion, till v He strike a stumbling block in punc tuation kind. Goes reading on, intent to catch the sense That has been hidden by the poet's cunning mind Somewhere in wordy forests, on pre tense Of decorative gardening, I am ap palled. Why not assert the fact in statement bold, In ordinary prose, with cause and con sequence? For with this sad example here, con sider what is worse Than some once living thought, em blamed in verse? II. Of the Study of Shakespeare Intent on understanding ell he meant, They chose one book of all the Jew eled store He left us, finely wrought of silver dreams And golden human passions, melted, blent Within the furnace of his mind to that rich ore Of poetry, whose secret none but him has found. They bought them vari-colored inks and reams Of notebook paper, all whose space they filled With curious plots of lines and fig ures round, Presenting impulse and effect and t style ; The climax and catastrophe to build. They delved in first editions, critics' works, the while The play passed by, in solemn pag eantry arrayed, And they planned out the stage on which it played. CONVOCATION Tomorrow: Lecture by Professor Pugsley, of the Agricultural Exten sion department, on "School Garden ing." Friday: Lecture by Professor Dann on paintings of the Art association in the Art gallery. CHADDLRDON TO LEAD THE TENNIS CLUB This is the year in which everybody is arranging to have a photograph made on their birthday; a record which you, perhaps, have neglected. Let Townsend serve you. Studio, 26 So. 11th St. St J. A. Chadderdon, of Oxford, was chosen president of the Summer School Tennis association at the meet ing Monday afternoon in the student activities office. Mr. hadderdon will have charge of organizing the tennis tournament that is planned for the summer. It was decided that only Summer School students and faculty men were to be admitted to the club and to the use of the courts. Two nets bought by the club and left on the courts have been stolen. Miss Jean Burroughs, '17, of the Daily Nebraskan staff last semester, is temporarily society editor for the Lin coln Daily Star. ' V- I 9 Summer comfort comes from, not only having enough shirts, but having the ones you like to wear. A GREAT SHOWING OF THE KIND YOU LIKE Wash Silk, $3.85; Silk Crepe de Chine, $5.00; Heavy Silk, $5.85. Flowered Jap Crepe very new, $2.00 Patterns from the sublime to the ridiculous ICool Cloth Suits LOOK COOL ARE COOL Have all the style of the heavier wool suit, but what a difference on a hot day in your bodily comfort. $7.50 136 $9.00 $10.00 GENUINE PALM BEACH SUITS $5.00 The University School of Music ESTABLISHED 1894 SPECIAL SUMMER TERM rtms until July 22nd Instruction in al Ithe principal branches of music. Students of any advancement may register now. Special attention give nto the needs of University summer students. . Ask for information WILLARD KIMBALL, Director. . llth&RSts. Opposite the Campus