T1H SUMMER NEBRASfCAN VOM'MNK XXI. No. 160. Lincoln, Nebraska, Thursday, June 8, 1022. PKICK FIVK CUNTS RHiORD FOR SUMMER SCHOOL ATTENDANCE yore Students Already Listed Than Attended Both Sessions Last Year. Registration for the 1922 summer school at the University of Nebraska will hit a new high mark. With fig ures yet incomplete, 1,609 registrants have been counted. For both sessions 0f the 1921 summer school only 1,589 were counted, according to figures from the registrar's office. A number of students are expected to register today. Late coiners must register with their deans and pay a late fee- It Is probable that the 1,700 mark will be passed for the 1922 first session. Mure than the usual number of win ter school students and students, lust out of high school are registered this year. There is also a large number of teachers taking work in the summer sessions. Kvery Instructor in the university will be here lor one of the two ses sions and many will have classes In both. The courses offered this year assure a large selection of subjects and it is expected that an unusual number will register for the second term. The registration for the fir.it six weeks last year was 1,398 and the total for the two terms 1,589. The enrollment by Tuesday evening of the first term last year was 908 as com pared with 1,609 this year. The number registered in each col lege is yet uncertain. This will be announced later. Indications now are for t he largest enrollment in the his tory of the university for a summer session. MEDICS AND DENTS TAKE STATE EXAMS it SPORTS Athletic Contests Planned as Part of Course for Athletic 0 Coaches. Students in the summer sessions of the University of Nebraska have registered unexpectedly heavy for the athletic training courses offered by the athletic office. Coaches Schulte, Frank and Day are giving instruction to students, particularly those who -wish to coach high school athletics, on the theory and practice of football, baseball, track and basketball. The inn-rest already shown in these courses is very gratifying and indi cates an interesting session. Plans are being made now to hold athletic contests for the students registered in these courses. Twilight baseball contests will be held together with basketball and football games. A track meet or two will probably be held some time during the summer. Medical and dental students of the University of Nebraska are busy this week taking state examinations. A large number of students from the College of Medicine at Omaha are in Lincoln to show the state board their ability as M. D.'s. Dental students are busy filling and cleaning teeth in an effort qualify for a certificate. TEN TICKETS 1 IN DEMAND Summer School Students Given Rights to Courts by Paying Small Fee of $1. . Tickets for the right to play tennis on the University of Nebraska courts are much in demand by summer school students. On Tuesday, the first day of the summer session there was an unexpectedly large number of calls for the paper slips entitling the bearer to piay the racquet sport. The tickets cost $1 and may be purchased at the student activities office in the basement on the west end of the ad ministration building. For persons outside the university the fee is $5. The University of Nebraska has a strjng of the finest courts possible. Nearly a half hundred of the net fields grace the north side of the campus. All of the courts are kept in excellent condition at all times. The courts are open for use throughout the day. If the number of summer students making use of the tennis courts in creases according to the expectations following the first day rush, it is very probable that a tournament will be held to decide the best manipulator of the racquet. In such a tournament there will probably be singles and doubles for all men, singles and doubles for all women, and mixed doubles. REPORTERS WANTED. If YOUR paper is to be fully representative of the entire body of students in the summer sessions, a string of good live reporters is needed. There have already been a number of appli cations for work on The Sum mer Nebraskan but there is still room for many more writers. It is impossible for one or two persons to handle all of the news of a community of near 2,000 such as the university but it Is the will of the management 'that all the news of the school be printed. In order to do this there must be a string of active reporters. Apply between three and four o'clock today at the student activities office. NEBRASKAN EXCHANGES OPEN TO ALL STUDENTS Each day The Summer Nebraskan receives a large number of papers from other schools In the country. There are many items of Interest In these papers which cannot be pub lished in the Nebraskan. Students In the summer sessions may use these papers at any time by coming to the Daily Nebraskan office on the second floor of U hall. IS ACTING DIRECTOR Track Coach Will Assume Duties of Dawson Who Is Off on a Sum mer Vacation. Track Coach Henry F. "Indian" Schulte has been appointed assistant director of athletics at the University of Nebraska by Fred T. Dawson, head football coach and director of ath letics. Schulte will have active charge of the athletic department dur ing the absence of Coach Dawson on a vacation trip this summer. Schulte has been a coach at Ne braska more than three years. He succeeded "Doc" Stewart to the post tion of coach of athletics in the fall of 1919. He also has held the reins as head coach of the track team and has brought two Missouri Valley con ference track championships to Ne braska the last two years. The increasing number of men who filed for the different athletic teams made it impossible for one man to handle the work of coaching all teams. In accordance with an . en larged athletic program laid out by the former director of athletics, Fred W. Luehring, Schulte became head coach of track and Dawson was ap pointed to supervise the Cornhusker football men. CORHUS K S RS" ON SALE Cornhusker..Management is Praised For Works That the 1922 (Everybody's) Corn husker is a distinct success and truly represents the real Nebraska spirit and tradition is the verdict of all Ne braskans who have had a glimpse of the 1922 year book. Juding from the the "Everybody's Cornhusker" Is ex clean workmanship and clever gct-up, pected to rate highly in the national competition of college annuals and it will be classed among those making a tight race for first honors. The book was offered to the students of the university on June 25, and prac tically the entire edition, was "gob bled up" within the week. A few of these books still remain in the hands of the Student Activities Office. These Continued on Page Three) ERS TAKE PART N NATIONAL MEET Schulte Selects String of Eight Men' to Compete In Contests at Chicago Next Week. Eight Cornhusker track artists will be entered in the national inter collegiate track and field champion ships to be held at Chicago next week according to an announcement made by Track Coach Henry F. Schulte. With but five men entered last year the Cornhusker athletes placed rfixth in the field. The Cornhusker tracksters to make the trip to Chicago will be Captain "Ed" Smith, who broke the Missouri Valley 220-yard record; Captain-elect Kenneth Hawkins, 440-yard and relay artist; Allen, mtler; Gardner, 880 yard runner; Moulton, discus and shot put; Turner, high jump, Gish, low and high hurdles; "Ted" Smith, 440 yard dash. The Nebraska tracksters have made an enviable record this year. Second in the Missouri Valley indoor meet, first in the Missouri Valley track and field championship meet and winner of a string of dual meets comprise the 1922 record. Captain Smith broke the Valley 220-yard dash at Lawrence and tied the 100-yard dash record at 9 4-5 seconds. Allen, with no competition, broke the Nebraska track record for the three-quarter mile run this week by making the circuit in 18. 4-5 seconds. RESPOND TO CALL FOR NEWS WRITERS Summer School Students Fnd Report ing a Pleasing Recreation From Studies. In response to the call issued in the first edition of the Summer Nebras kan, a number of ' applications for positions on the reportorial staff have already been received. These writers will commence work immediately, having definite offices assigned to them. The response 'Tuesday afternoon was very gratifying but there are still positions to be filled if the paper is to be made representative of all sum mer school students. It is not neces sary, however, to file as a reporter if you wish to write. Articles of all kinds wjiich are of interest to univer sity students are solicited. The Summer Nebraskan is en deavoring to make the paper fulfill all the needs of a university publication. Summer school is rather quiet and It is the will of the management that the paper be made a means by which erganizations of various kinds may be brought together for the summer. Students who have already signified their intentions to work for The Sum mer Nebraskan are: Valda Torey, Kenneth Scofleld, C. F. Bowman, Laura Rooney, Neita Ellis, Harold Sumption. Get Tennio Tickets at Student Activities Office Today, $1.00