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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (May 27, 1921)
I t THE DAILY NEHRASKAN THE DAILY NEBRASKAN I'uhllRhiMl Sunilny. TiM-mlny. V.iliiK(in.v. 11iiiikiI:i.v iiiul Krlilii.v i f ifli wi-ek li.v the TiilviTHliy nf Nflirnska. OKI 1(1 VI. I'MVKIISITY I'l HI.HATION I ii.Iit tlif illreilliiu iif th Sluilillt I'llli- linit mini lluuril. Kiinrrd ns m-i'oiiiI ln- nmtli'r lit tliff pt ol flif In Lincoln. !VIiie-lii. iiikIit Act ii r t iiiiki-i'sh. Miireli H. IH!. Sill. Ki'ripl urn nilr -" l'" .v'"r SI.'J.V per HfincMtrr Mi, uli- -uv 5 ''" EDITORIAL STAFF N. STORY HARDING... Editor-in-Chief JACK AUSTIN Managing Editor ."ESSIE WATSON Associate Editor ORVIN GASTON News Editor GREGG McBRIDE News Editor ROY Gl'STAFSON News Editor lir.l l.i: I l KM AN . Society Kilitnr (IIVKI.KS .MIT II I.I.I. Sport KMur Tcli itliiinr ll-:t."ill; niiim WIS, "l'" Hull A.iHliint rtl It hi-in I wrltrr: llclt-n Howe. Muni liiiiiilnl, lliirliin Uii.vri- mill Joy titiilliiril. l.citruil.' l'iitlTmi nnil inf Icm I.hiik's. ii-lstiiiit Niicii'l.v cililum. Kulliiirlnr von Minckwlti, stuff artist. BUSINESS STAFF GLEN GARDNER. Business Manager JAMES FIDDOCK .Asst. Business Mgr. KNOX BURNETT Circulation Mgr. AilvrrlUinir A-l- ant : Imiiiicc.v Kin nrv. ( liiiiinccy I'mier, t lillnril IlirkN. New llrtitiir tor Till I-mi it :.. MiituiDi: represented In this year's book, pusses the board. The result such a section will nmke i. n the decision of parents throushout the stato, when they are considering sending their dAuRhterd to this uni versity, must not bu lost sight of. The place lor the Student Life section if ilils year Is in a big bon-flre whose li.iiuos would make a burning oil well lo.k like a flickering candl. OUR LAST BOW We make our last how today. This is the last issue of the Dnily Nbr;i 1 paying business in the country.' FORD AND EDISON College men may not be able to answer Edison's highly foolish ques tions, but lliey seem to iu;,ke a coir, forhtble living for themselves, uc cording to reliable figures. And a;l this without the alleged education which Edison's dicta says is neces.ir;. Un Hie average, college men are earn ing ?5 SOt) a year and college women are geUing $2. SOU each twelve months lleeenily i;i "The Onee Ovel," II. 1. Pliill ps told of the experiences of llnry Ford as he mythically applied for a job at the Edison works Scene: Edison plant. I im : l'leiuv. Mr. Ford inters and p.sks Mr. Edi son for a position. Edison: "Well, Hen, what can I do for yon?" Ford: 'Tin looking for work. Edison: "Loking for woik'! Why. man. Itlu.ught you Wad the bigger kan for the current school ye; r. The history of events on tin? campus ha.-! been recorded. We now look with nw life to the Xebraskan of next year. A nw staff has been chosen, capable, we believe, to "carry on" in a splen did manner. The staff of the daily has cooper ated perfectly during the past seines tre. Each reporter has felt rn indi vidual responsibility and a desire t help make the paper more than a chronicle of musty items. N'-wspapc. work is not easy.In adition io th? many hours ot worn siuacii's nave spent on the Nebraskan. they have kept their scholarship above pat. I'his is neeesnry, because there is nlo a scholarship eligibility for those who work on student publimattons. Today we welcome a new staff ot workers, headed on the editorial sti.ff by Jack Austin, '23. and on the busi ness side by James Fiddoek. '23. To these new members we wis1! ths pleasant asociation that have been a tonic to our work at the Univers'ty of Nebrasska for this year. If it had not ben for the 'oyfUy of Lincoln merchants in supplying ad vertisements for the paper this year, the puglication would not have bpen able to exist. When you purchase of these merchants, remember that they stand back of Nebraska first and always. They are the backbone of student affairs. WELCOME TO THE SONG 60UK The first sons book in many cars that has apeared on the campus is being Issued today'. Not only doc0 it contain the best song boks of Neb raska, but it cointains a nurrbei rf new prize-winning colleee sonc. e.eli eated to the Cornhusker school, b student writers and from the p'Mis i f alumni. aaloto n fasta Sodvy- ar-'tmi ostlo'r The book is attractivelv bound in Ford: "No, 1 wanta get into a ne.v game, something more illuminate.;; and with a brighter future in it." Edison: Whateher punter do with Iho flivver business?" Ford: "Oh, I know a couple of nice young Jewish boys, and I'm punter let 'em have it." Edison:" Well, Hen, you're a iricn l of mine and all that, but I cant give any one here a job who doesn't p.iss my XYZ test. It's the rule you know. Ho you think you could an swer a hundred questions on hi.-tor , geography, etc." Ford: "The last time I trird it 1 made an awful mess of it. Couldn't you lay off the history stuff just as a favor?" Edison: "No. history is very im portant in the electric light business. A man who doesn't know, for instance, how long Cleopatra was sick, could never string a telephone wire prorer- ly and Just fancy emplojin a man to charge a batery if he rouldu t tell offhand what colored vests Ii-.Mii r the Eighth wore." Ford: "Well, shoot your question?, but I don't like the idea." Edison: "Who was Paul Ffvere." Ford: '"A jockey or something Eke that, wasn't he?" Edison: "Correct. Who wrote 'The Star Spangled Banner?" Ford: "George C. Francis Coha". wasn't it ?" i Edison: "Right! Now who w;-s John Quincy Adams?" Ford: "He's the feller that writes 'The Coning Tower,' in the Tribune." Edison: "Closh. Hen, you know ev- rj thing." Ford: "Well. l'e studied a bit in I f " my .-pare parts I should Fa.. i. y spiire hours." I 5 Edison: "Who was Mohes?" I 2 Ken.: ' L i s net get in'.,, -:r,v ra- ! " x cial dispuii-.' Student Opinion To the Students of the University: I am more than pleased that the otu duiils show a disposition to rebuke adequately those responsibl for thJ improper matter in Iho student life .section of the Cornhusker. Since the publicutino of the torn busker in 1912 I have each year re minded the Chairman of th Pub'! cation board of his duty ti see that nothing improper is published. This year on the 13lli of .April I sent him a letter from which the following a:' extracts: They (the students) should, iiowever, cooperate with you in keep ing out any suggstions thtat lower the estimation o fthe University in tho eyes of the public. As a havy pur chaser for High school publicity pur poses the University has the right to expect that the students publish no thing hat will weaken the confidence of the people of the state in the University. 1 am sure the students will tako the same point of view. A few things that I feel particularly concerned about are as follows: That the be no squibs suggesting 1. x moral conditions, disgraceful episode, iddeci nt dancing, etc , " Later tin; Chairman reported verbal ly to me that everything had been cart fully attended to and that tin .-..talent editors had agreed to sulntii ihe copy to him for approval. It i.p- ;oars now from his published state ment that some of the copy the; he criticised was inserted and hat all t! the copy was not scrutinized. Tli' letttr wfis sent to the Chairn :.n during ;i most critical time in the legislative session and 1 was not at tho time fully aware of his serious illness. He was endeavoring to carry his work In the University under a great physical handicap and !s still The Checks Have It in Ginghan Street Frocks! far from being a well man. Had I been fully cognizant of this f.ut. 1 should have placed the burden of censorship on somO other mniber of th Publication Board and relieved him of this duty. I have directed that the copies to bo presented to the high selio-d of th state be rebound without the joke sction at the expense of the manage ment or that the order be cancelled. The on encouraging feature of the ntire incident is that student snti inent is now fully determined to moke this section of th annual worthy ef the Univisity. The manifestatioi of this spirit makes me feel that the official efforts of the last nine j-.ari have not ben in vanin. S. AVERY, Priced at 16.50 ami never have we displayed more attractive model in combinations of navy and white brown and white Copenhagen and white red and white black and white green and white pink and white There are frocks with long waists and the straight line collars so becoming to women of generous proportions; models which boast of double collars and cuffs of white organdie bound In the material; dresses which choose rick rack as a smart trimming; those collared, cuffed and pocketed in dotted Swiss and as many other styles all inclined to be sashed, and all well made of a very fine quality of gingham. Second Floor. 2! Ensign Omnibus and Transfer Co. TAXI Brown Cars, 25c Per Mile BAGGAGE Yellow Trucks, 50c Per Trunk, 2 Miles B3288 Day or Night 221 So. 11th r. k k a K k : ST K 'K'R'K ! ; scais'.jj.s k a x a'x a "a a a "a ; a.a a.a"a:a;B -.K,.K;XXKXxKlR1.XiWX'7M"'iC3' :Jajt.K1a.a.a1a:al"la.aiitiKrfjX'.a a a a a a uy. r.)t.ittiijiii; 0P a nw t&$ E.lison : Eiiison : "Now, "Now, Hen, Hen, te!! me, who red cloth and thn outisde rover roi tair.s a sketch by Oswald Black. Tim w,,s Hendrik Hudson?" volume o fsones is fittingly dedicated j Ford: "HL. invented the to Mrs. Carie R. Raymond, who han j motor car." tell nit, wh(; f ' Tmw I V' r jttt I02Q- 033 QStixi Outstanding Values in Hudson i a : contributed so much to th" t"niver;-;iy Edison, from a musical standpoint. jot tt villi To Ward Randol. editor of tho book Fold: and with whom the germ of colecting j It tte." Nebraska's songs into an imperirhable I Edison volume originated, and to the com mittee which wcrki-d with him. we express the appreciation of the ent' e school. "Who wrote 'The Carbv' 'I dunno unless it was Gil- Suits Correct, Hen. Tell mo something about Mephistopheleo." Ford: '.Mephistopheli s are 'ons mosquitoes, ain't they?" Edison: "It's impossible to st'en you. What Latin motto was on the original American flag?" Ford: "K. O. D. Detroit." Edison: "What is the capital ft THAT STUDENT LIFE SECTIJN It's not the Cornhusker proper wuh which we wish to find fault. It'e thai Student Life section which som? i Koeony?" publication of the 1321 annual. The I Ford:'-About $10,000,000." alleged humor, whh f haracteriies j Edison: "Where is Sedan, which trm has disappeared since tne Ford: "1 dunno, I came have termed th-p "Joke' section, but coupe?" iu the caricatures of some forty studect!1, was almost humorless at the tine cf the first reading. But if anyone did wade through the section a second or thir time such humor becomes not merely devoid of wit, but almost Irz&z and slandprous. Coming from one who was hit and not bit lightly at that this sounds like a prejudiced opinion. As 'ar a3 that goes, the writer is far from sen sitive and it Is not to tb.p comments In this regard to which we refer. When the Student Life section of i year-bbok-which i, supposed to be the LAUGHABLE part of theanLual makes ten or twelve Univc-s'ty cnttin wep big salty tears Into waiting hand kerchiefs. it is puit Prions. Especial- -hen these co are not of the "tremelvseriotu frame of raird. totD0 4tempt ln thls edltortil perST T?6 bIame 0n P""W P I such a book wa. cen-ored. U fa .tim, tha th Student Uf , .ectloa u a tradition, be elinv tt Mci Department as fa Edison: "Name a famous general " Ford: "General Motors." Edison: "Where arae the greatest tin minnes located?" Ford: "Detroit Edison: "Who discovered carbon."" Ford: "Do you know any car own er who didnt?" Edison: "How many miles to a gal lon?" Ford: "Eighten or your mcny back." Edison: "What does the Monroe doctrine guarantee?" Ford: "Ninety day's service r.t any of our service stations." Edison: "What killed Ben Ilvrf Ford: "Probably a garage bill fir chariot repairs.' Edisoin: "Where do all the cod3h come from?" Ford: "I dunno. I Just keep ar vertisin' the car and they just flock in from all side to buy It." Edison: "Oh, there's no nso going any further; yon answer them as wcil as I could. Take off your coat and hat and go to wrof - a K.a " a a a a a 5? Of i ft x I a IS: , 1 'r- x" ft Dresses and If bouL'lit at reu-uhir prices, we would have to sell these suits and dresses at least twice the price now on them. You can choose from the entire assort ment, regardless of what values are you'll find the newest in dresses of silk taffeta, etc., th sui's are the latest styles and repre sent values to the 4!l..ri0 price mark choose your new frocks or suits here and pay $M1)30 at New Sport Hats in time for Decoration Day wear SPORT HATS the new styles and colors in vopue for summer wear are here. Ribbon, yarn, silk, felt and braid combinations add to their beauty. New Georgette Hats in delicate pastel shades ; beautiful Taffeta Hats, Lovely Leghorn Hats, and pretty Fancy Straws. All in all, a wonderful as sortment of Hats, wide in variety so that every woman may find "just the Hat she wants." ; Trices range 3.95 to 11.95 GOLD'S Third Floor. it a u 'ft 3 8 O o. c a ft 'ft ft. it. C r. ft x $ ft. On Sale Friday-- Our Entire Stocks of Women's and Misses' Spring and Summer Wraps and Coats at en i i Our Regular Prices OUR entire stocks, nothing reserved, this means every beautiful wrap and coat in stock Silk Bolivia, chenill embroidered, quilted satins, straight line, belted models, ete. in all the desirable shades All on Sale. At Half Regular Low Prices means Extraordinary Bargains GOLD'S Third Floor. 2 4 i ajJiiaast . . ) . - '' ' ' ' F