r SUMMER NEBRASKAN PiiIiIImIiiwI TiihuiIiiv. T lllirHllll V 1111(1 Sll I II T- .l,iv of i-iu'h wock lv tlio lulvi-rnlty of NchniHku. Kiih'rcil n h mi'I'iiikI cIuh mutter lit tin DiiHtiirricii III Miiroln, Nt'liniHkii, llliili'f Act of liiimri'KM. March :i, 1.X7U. OFFICIAL I'NIVKKSITY 1'HHMCATION I'mlrr the illrwtltin of thr Mtudrnt l'ub Ili'iilUinn lloiinl. Niibwtrli(luii rut. Btlo for tlio mimmrr. HI 11 it copy. Bo. MANAUKMKNTt Jnck AuNtJn Miinini Wilbur IVlfrMui Editor OKFICK HOLKSl Mnnr anil Kdltor 8 to 4 Iall.v Room 206 Uul Hull THE STADIUM STANDS Tho university stadium Is apparent ly at a standstill. In tlio latest state ment from the committee it says, "The total cost of such a structure will be approximately $400,000. This entire amount should be raised within five years but the quicker the money is raised the sooner the stadium will be completed. The total amount should be completely subscribed before actual construction Is begun." If this means that tho stadium will not be started until the entire 1400, 000 Is subscribed, students and alumni of the university should get busy right now. Nebraska needs a stadium and needs It right quick. Not. five years from now, not ten years but NOW. Affairs should be arranged so that the project can start within six months. If the statement means that only so much of the stadium will be construct kI as the subscriptions now on band and within a very few months war rant, then the situation is encouraging. At least a quarter of the structure ought to be constructed before next spring. Enough money for that much of the work to be completed immed iately is on hand cr could be raised without a great deal of effort before the close of the football season. Students are getting anxious about the stadium. For some four years, talk has gone the round of the new structure. Xo start has as yet been made. A strenuous campaign for lunds is now due and the sooner it is carried out the better. will win, that Nebraska will como out ahead. If Nebraska teams lose, Ne braska students do not Jeer. They have u tondoncy to become under enthusiastic but that is fr better than to havo a group Jeering. Harvard must bo in u bad way. If it Is the fault of the athletic manage ment in fostering unclean tactics In securing players, in attempting to do reat the other team, then the Jeering students are In the right If it is because Harvard is affiliated with a malady making it Impossible for the I hue-honored school to hold its stu dents together in one pchool-pushing group, then something is radically wrong. Whatever troubles Harvard Is serious and needs Instant remedy. " BOOING THEIR ATHLETES Because they said, some students jeered at Harvard athletes last fall, that school has decided this year that it will sell tickets to those students who are proven loyal or can be vouch ed for by loyal students friends. How serious the condition of affairs at Harvard is probably no one outside the school knows. Hut when a story to that effect is sent broadcast thru out the country, Harvard spirit is in a bad way. Nebraska spirit is not so. Nebraska students are behind their athletes. They do not jeer them. They do cheer them. Cornhuskers may make no such demonstrations at their contests as characterizes Harvard aDd other east ern schools. But it does not have within its student body those who do not wish wholeheartedly that Nebraska COMING TO THE CLOSE Like a book, within ten days, the .1922 summer session will come to a c'ose. Another hot weather school, the largest attended on record, will bo left In arrears. Tho first session went quickly. More than 2,000 students were enrolled. They studied hard. Then with the be ginning of the second term some thou sand of them passed out, went back to their homes to spend the rest of the vacation. Now there is but a comparatively few days left. Students will soon com mence long "cram" sessions hoping to pir.ke their grades in one hard study. They may succeed; they may not. Those students will be in the minority. Many more will be those who have performed their work steadily, faith fully, getting each and every assign ment to the best of their ability. That characterizes the summer students. A HORSE STORY Next to a good dog story, a good horse story is best appreciated by lov ers of animals. From Washington, D. C, comes the story of Jack Gallop, who for ten years served honorably as a fire horse on a big steamer. But the motor finally got old Jack and the faithful animal was led away, much to the regret of the firemen who had learned to know and love him. A week after Jack had bid farewell to the fire station and his erstwhile hu man pals, he was hitched to a garbage wagon. It was a sad reward, for a decade of honorable service for the day was hot and the garbage wagon fmell ed badly. Walking along in deep chagrin, Jack spied a fire station, and then something unheard of in horse history occurred. Jack said something to his mate, in horse language, took tile bit In his teeth and bolted right into the stone wall of the station, head long. He crumpled to tho pavement in a heap, dying shortly thereafter. Now some folks, who know very little about horses, will say that he became mad with the heat, but the firemen who 1 new Jack for many years, declare that Jack deliberately committed suicide. The truth will never be known, but it is a fact that fire horses do become Rent a Typewriter Three Dollars For One Month Ten Dollars For Four Months C. J. Mosher Company Typewriters all Makes 127 No. 13th St. Phone B2157 so attached to their work and their human friends that when taken out of the service, they seem to lose Bplrit and vitality and frequently, die shortly nfter they begin their pension days. At any rate, he would bo a foolish man to argue that Jack Gallup did not suffer anguish when taken from the fire engine and hitched to a garbage wagon. The Lincoln Sunday Star. A home for young men away from homo, Y. M. C. A. B6516. Baseball Tonight The Pedagogues and Baa ketball class, tied for Becond place in the Twilight league, will clash tonight in the only game scheduled. DANCING SCHOOL Ldncolns Leading Dancing Academy now open. Learn to dance for $5 00 In class or private. Free if you fall to learn. Two professional teach The Franzmathea. School for Dancing 1018 N St, Phone B6054 Open 9 a. m. to 10 p. m. i WE LOCATE TEACHERS AT GOOD SALARIES Ask our Members. They KNOW. We can and will locate YOU. Teachers of EVERY KIND wanted to fill "calls." Enroll FREE. Nebraska School Service and Teachers Exchange 1105 u street, itooms 3 ana , Lincoln, weDrasita. i t Do You Need Extra Courses? Students not attending the university this summer have six weeks before the opening of the fall session in which they may work off requirements, gain extra credits, or become eligible 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 aitd bring 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, and 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