SUMMER NEBRASKAN l'nt)ll8h'l TiiPHilnv, TluirHiliiy at atur ,1,'v ,'f e.uh w.-.k by tin' iWer.lty of .Ni'liriiHkn. . Knt.Tod hh B.ci.ii.1 flnns mutter at the Aft ot lonirremi. Mnrvh ' Mt tK IAL I N1VKRSITV l'l III.ICATION I nilrr the direction of tl.r Student Tub llrallon Hoard. h..lrlitlon rut M tor the .ummer, Mnjrla copy. Sc. Jnok Aiiotln W llltur 1'eleri.oii M ANAtiKMKNT: Miinimer ... Kdllor OKMt K IIOl KMt Mnrr nd Kdllor . ............8 In Room 206 I'ni Hull 4 Ihill.v LOWERING EDDUCATION COSTS In Missouri, students in the high schools nre required to buy their own books. None are furnished for their use without charge. In Nebraska, hlRh school students buy nothing but note book paper, pen cils and fountain pens. If they are lucky enough to have a lot Of friends and at the: sr. me time themselves possess the necessary iuive. they do not even buy those" much of the time. Missouri has a law requiring stu dents to attend School. (Nebraska also has such a law. Nebraska does not Inflict the penalty of forcing her children to so to school and then to buy the neoesfary equipment to con tinue that schocling. It at least makes it comparatively easy for students to secure an education. Hooks, especially text books, are not cheap. University students know that. High school books are, as a rule, cf impractical value once the student has passed the course. Uni versity text books, most of them at least, are excellent reference books even after one lias completed his school work. It is not fair to the students in Missouri high schools to force them to attend school and then to scrape together the money to buy their books. Missouri should, if it is to have en forced education, which it most cer tainly should have, appropriate a sum sufficient to enable the public schools to buy her test books which can be used by their students. Missouri owes that much to the students. Many children find it almost im possible to get enough money to buy suitable school clothes: where- are they to get the money to buy books, a not small item of expense? Missouri certainly is as capable of equipping its schools with books as is Nebraska. In" fairness to the stu ents it should do so: it should bu books for every publi'- high school and charge the students only for the dam ace which they do to th books leaned them. The books, as a rule, are not injured. Missouri would then mater ially lower the cost of education for its children. freshmen lia been kept and these "hlgh-browa", as they are regarded by their classmates, get by without hav ing to do the traditional. Some measure of requiring every freshman 1o Jwear the green caps should be adopted. It Is a distinctive custom and the first year men should be proud rather than ashamed to wear the emerald headgears. Other schools, especially private institutions, main tain strict adherence "to similar cus toms. Nebraska freshmen should be required to wear the green caps. Every last one of them, not fratern ity pledges alone, should observe the time-honored tradition. Some method of enforcing the custom should be worked out. WORDS "No man can be master of his own thinking unless he Js a master of words." v That Is the statement of writers anc" speakers. It bears much truth. How can n man form an opinion without words in which to form it? A man thinks with words and a lack of words means a lack of thinking power. Kipling once said that every night, before retiring, he took a few min utes in which to make himself fully acquainted with two new words. Just two, not much of an addition at any one time. But in a week It meant fourteen new words, in a month sixty, in a year 7.10. And in a very few years several thousands. There is no wonder that Kipling became one of the best writers of his day. Writers and speakers everywhere make It a point tc memorize every new word which they hear. They be come familiar with it, they use it in sentences. Then when the time comes in which they could use no word but that, they are not lost, they had pre pared ahead of time. They form their opinions, their thoughts, with the words which they have mastered. The more words they learn, the more deep ly they think. William Jennings Bryan is a brilliant orator because he is a master of words. So it is that any man who wishes to become a great writer or delightful speaker must master words, not the scientific words, the unpronounceable words, the frightfully long words, but the words which the people with whom they deal .understand. They toiust learn how to use words in such a way that they tan state clearly and quickly any thought which they have, any idea which they wish to introduce. SPORTING THE GREEN University of Nebraska students, sophomore men especially, will read with interest the following paragraph from the Notre Dame Scholastic: "The freshmen get their deserts at Oregon. Seven of them who failed to wear the traditional green canopy w ere recently ordered to report at the library to receive their punishment which takes the form of strenuous wielding of paddles by the member of the Order of O. The day of cor poral punishment has not yet van ished." Each year at Nebraska, there is a certain number of the incoming men who regard themselves a Just a little belter than the average. They cannot loner themselves to the extent of wearing the traditional green caps. In the past no complete check erf the The. same might apply to nations. Nations that are prone to annex ter ritory rightfully belonging to other nations may sometime And themselves stripped of their own territory autd dia graced. Realization of the value of one's pos sessions is a virtue too seldom seen. Columbia Evening Missourlan. DAWSON RETURNS FROM VACATION Fred T. Dawson, director of ath letics, head coach of football, and dean or men, has returned to the Univer sity of Nebraska following a vacation trip to Colorado. .Dawson arrived t his office Tuesday afteruoon and Int. mediately started hla duties aa direc tor of athletics and dean of men. Nen I Chadderdon, until August 1, agent ot student activities, and Track Coach Henry F. Schulte handled the work of the head coach during his absence. DANCING SCHOOL Lincolns Leading Dancing Academy now open. Learn to dance for $5.00 In class or private. Free If you fall to learn. Two professional teachers The Franzmathes. School for Dancing 1018 N St., Phone B6054 Open 9 a. m. to 10 p. m. REALIZATION Realization! Its meaning is three-fold. Some times one may realize that after hard work he has accomplished an end; again cue may realize that, through idleness, he has never accomplished a single deed; and one may also realize that talents once possessed have, from sheer thcughtfulness or waywardness. been lost And of all these, the last is the saddest, if not the worst. To realize that one has accomplished an end is an incentive to further work. The realization that one has never ac complished a thing may serve as a stimulus to work. To realize that through waywardness, one has lost talent once possessed is to realize that he is lowered in the estimation of business associates with whom be was once well established. To regain a reputation lost in this way is no easy matter. If people would realize the comforts they possessed and be content with their possession, there would be less strife in the world. STEWART SCHOOL SERVICE Conducted by experienced school people, backed by six years of Sue sessful Business. Well qualified Teachers Invited to Enroll Now. Address 138 No. 12th St. Lincoln, Nebraska. Do You Need Extra Courses? Students not attemlinjr the university this summer have six weeks before the opening of the fall session in which they may work off requirements, pain extra credits, or become elipible for school activities in case twenty-seven credit hours were not made last year. The University Extension Division makes it possible for students to study at home and brinp the University of Ne braska to their front door. If you have several spare hours each day they may very profitably be devoted to this work. Economics History Could You Use three hours of Education Mathematics English Philosophy The Extension Division makes it possible for you to get thewe courses, .mil many more, in a short time at a minimum cost. For information, address A. A. REED, Director University Extension Division Sta. A, University of Nebraska Lincoln, Nebraska GOOD CLEANERS AND LAUNDERERS O. J. Fee 327 No. 12th Tel. B3355