SHE DAILY NEBRASKA M The Daily Ncbraskan nit I'll Mimliiy. Tnemlny. WoiliH'tuln.v, TlniiMi.n Mini I riilny ninriilutt of curb Wi'rk In- lln' I i.lviTsity i'f Ni'liiiiHkii. Ai'i-i i'ii'.I f.r iniiillnu' nl hiu'i'IiiI rate of iiomiiit 1 1 r v iili-il for In i.f di'i'ii'i'i' :i, r.'oT S.'Clloii llOIt, Act iiuiliiirl.t'il .1 miliar y I'll, OKI KIM. I M KKS1TV )! IU.UTI if Hi ill Ion Itimril. Kill' inl us HiM'nlKl fin poKl'ill'"'!' ill l.li.riiln. Ni'l'i' Act l' ' iiiMn Marrh .'I, lllllllrr III I ll nkn, iiinlt r i li' ls;n. bulikirii'liiin rule CI :.1 tilnuli' ' l' II fcfllH'Htrr MHI II .It'll! . rive Oiiln iliiii4 all 'ii linn inn :i I ions to rut: i in. m:iiii askan :r'"H A. I.liniilii, Ni'l. Tl I.K1 ll(M I nterliy IIS. i:v-iiIiikn Hi.nt.' I '.I .1 m..l lllisllH'Ml Illfll'l'S III Bitlllh- nvsi ..ivrcr f liasi'ini'iil uf I ho A.I ill I n It traii"ii Mall. Ilerli. lt Urdu lirll. Jr. I.illtor Miirjur.i- tV.niiull Milllimlll I : ill till Helen KinniniT opliile K.illlor hurlfs A. Mlt. li. ll MbIiI Killtor llnnnnl lliiff'tt Mlflit Killtor Fmm.'lt V. Miiun Mlit Killtor Cliii'iiKi'V llnf.v Unliii- MiiiiHgfr lirioril M. II Irk ( liiriMici I li Uliolf . Asi-I. Itimlnri. Mr. Clrrtiliittoit Muniiicer IIIIKK 1101 US. Killtor. 4-.'. ilaily. Maiiau-inu- Kilitor. :i IS .Lilly. l!iisin.'!. Mutineer. I tl ilaily. I'M! Nislil Killtnr . YMIIIiim llirtwi'll Till lsi K. HoMiml Itnff.tl Atx'l. Nlglit Killtor on every cent that was pledged at tlio time dosijniuted on the pledtfe. No loyal friend of the stadium will neglect his obligation and none will Vt iinelcssneaa or thoughtlessness prevent eager and willing response to the terms of the contract into wliieli lie or idle has entered. Actual construction of the stadium will be an inspiration to some to make their payments on time they can begin to visualize the true mean inn to Nebraska 1". and to her nth- 'otic teams of the fine structure mod elled as it Is after the finest in Ihe 'and. If there are those who can pay the wholi! stadium pledge at once, there should be no hesitancy in doing this bit to make possible more rapid ad vance on the work ot realizing re' biaska's athletic dream. meeting of the superintendents' sec tion of the National Education Asso elation was one of tho most success ful in the history of the association Nebraska was represented by over eighty of Its leading men and women in the profession. Pean Sealock served on an Important committee and gave an address. Notices I ll lll'H I'I'ljlll'.l III llvi iIiiy. if ei'iiernl liiterost will he tliU co I inn a for two roiisecii Copy shrub) tip In the Ne. The raster Says: The wide. traveled man is not the globe-trotter, but rather he who is able to nego tiate such distances as lie between the chamber of commerce and th'. labor temple John Andrew Holmes. Nebraska wins from Iowa in wrest lingthe only sport in which we will meet the Hawkeyes this year. There are a good many Cornhusker students who would like to see Nebraska's football team clash with the team from Iowa City. Contesting teams in the basketball tournament are to be congratulated on ihe spiendid playing and conduct displayed in Lincoln this week. Th.' tourney was ihe biggest in history and the management was never bet ter. Only fifteen of the contestants could carry home championships, but every school entered must have re ceived some benefit from the high standards of sportsmanship which predominated at all times. The University enjoyed the visit of two thousand prospective Cornhusk ers and is eager to have them all r; turn in 1924. The pleasure of rooting for the home team was the best part of the tournament for many. The closer contact between the University and the high schools will be one nf the lasting benefits of the contest. iiriiskim uffli hy fiv uclork.J Makeup In Chemistry Makeup or condition examinations n Chemistry 3 will be held in Room InS Chemistry Hall, Saturday, March IT, instead of March 7, as previously reported. Baseball All candidates for baseball and baseball team managers report at the Armory Monday, March 12, at 3:30, Kansas Students. There will be a meeting of tuc Kansas club Wednesday, Marh 14. the last meeting is postponed. Freshman Class Meeting. Fres-hman class meeting, Tuesday March K. at 11 o'clock in Social Sci once 101. Election of minor officers. Cornhusker. Organizations who have reserved pages in the 1923 Cornliusker will as sist the management greatly if they will call at the Cornliusker office any afternoon from 2 to 5 and make arrangements for the payment of ame. The "1923 Cornhusker" "Aristocrat of College year Books an Calendar Tuesday, March 13. I'nion business meeting. 7:00. Thursday, March 15 Delta meeting. Ellen Smith 7:15 Xi Hall, (University Publicity Office.) A definite plan of action against those students who persist in walk ing across the campus lawn must be formulated and put into effect this week if it is to do much good. At the Agricultural College it is said that violators of the request to keep off the lawns are thrown intj a tank for a good ducking. This sys tem has been so effective that patru. ling of the campus is not necessary and a strong student spirit again.-: "curing corners" has developed. This spirit is sadly lacking on the down-town campus. No better way win be found of creating such a spir: than by attaching some penalty to the offense and l'ting some student organization be authorized to indi. t the punishment. Th great part of the walking on the grass is due to carelessness hut it will not slop until he students are forcibly made to real 2" that tho practice must stop. Twelve hundred and ninety stu 'ents. carrying 5.440 hours, have com pleted, since 1909, correspondence courses in the University Extension division. This is about one-third the number registered. The division of fers 109 courses. Rules and instruc tions for correspondence study courses sent out recently by the division include the symbols used in correcting manuscripts. "How To Use Terman's Group Tests of Mental ity." by Dr. Charles Fordyce of the department of measurements and re search. Teachers College, is the sub ject of the latest issue ot me uni versity Extension News. The Next Part in the Stadium Drive Each day sees the realization of Ne braska's Memorial Stadium come r.farer. Workmen are busy building the structure for our fighting Corn buskers. Another month wfl! Fee more workmen and more rapid work on th" Site of the old athk-tic field. Every shovelful of dirt thnt is re-ttovp-I. every day's -work, every move to prepare the way for actual con struction must be paid for. When the 6tadium is completed it will be one of the finest in the middlewest, bat It will not be finished until payment are made. The splendid response of the stu dents in the stadium campaign last fall forms one of the brightest pages in the ristory of student spirit This same spirit will have to greet the call for prompt payment of stadium pledges if the story is to be complet ed in the right way. Prompt payment, then, should be the aim of every con tributor. The majority of the pladges do not have a second Installment due until summer time, but some of the con tributors have made arrangement to pay part of their pledge this spring. The Alumni Association is counting Mn on L. Corey. Law "OS. of Omaha, whom President Harding has appoint ed member of the Federal Farm Loan Hoard, las for several years been -n'-ral attorney for the Feweral Land Rank, Omaha. At the L'niver sity he won high scholarship honors. He won election to Theta Kappa Nu (now the Order of the Coif), the hon orary scholarship society in the Col lege of Law, and the faculty elected him to repres.-nt the institution in the P'.i7 debate with the University of Wisconsin on the municipal owner ship of street railways. He was mem ber of Delta Sigma Rho. the nation al honorary fraternity for intercol 1 siate dehators; Phi Alpha Tau. and Phi Delta Phi. law fraternity; and he was chief justice of the Supreme Court of the College of Law. He was county attorney, Clay County, In 10'iS-1914; was candidate (supported by Senator Hitchcock) for the Solici torship of the United States in 1913; was urged by Nebraska Democrats for appointment to the Interstate Commerce Commission In 1917; and has been prominently mentioned for the governorship and the Unite I States senatorship. The salary of his new position is 110,000. Prof. L. E. Aylsworth, of tho de partinent of political scienco and soci ology, has an article entitled "The Presidential Ballot," In the February number of the American Political Sci ence Review. In dealing with the various forms of presidential ballots, with their respective advantages and disadvantages, the article includes an exhaustive and nccurate study of the fcrni of ballot used in each state in the election of 1920, with a resultin classification Into five main groups. The article is of particular interest and value now, because It appears at i time when the legislatures in about forty states are in session and several are seriously considering ballot changes. A copy of "The Cold Regions of Kansas and Nebraska," by W. B. Hor ner one ot tne (tiree copies m pnoto- stat reproduction of the original was recently purchased by the Libr ary. The book contains some inter esting chapters, which should be of local interest to Nebraskans, dealing with the north and south Tlatte routes across the states. One hundred teachers representing twenty-five different schools have been called for up to Wednesday ac cording to the Teachers College bu reau ot recommendation ot teacners. One school sent a request for thir teen instructors. A few teachers have been definitely placed, but so far, must of the calls have not been filled Phi and Wesley Guild, two campus .oiganlzatlons ot Motliouist u.ue.... Thirteen ot the pictures were iane nt Oherainniergau. Miss Mabel Harris. Librarian ot the Teachers1 College High School, hits an article on "Library Material for Debating In High Schools" which Is appearing serially. James T. llegley. LL.ll. 06. of Cnss County, district judge, has been chos- . .1.-.. oiim'Sklllf) f'Olirt to en bv tne iNcui.iMvu. f.."- aid it with cases during March April. BUS and Cheese Federation Serves Wisconsin Still and moving pictures of the two houses of the Nebraska Legisla ture have been taken by Dr. G. E. Condra of the conservation and soil survey division the past two weeKS. Pictures of the House have been de livered as soon as printed. The legis lative reel some of it taken this year tnd a part of it two years ago and reel taken of parts of northeastern Nebraska were shown by Dr. Con dra Friday. Representatives from the Central Electrical company of St. Louis, the Western Electric company. New York the American Telephone and Tele graph company of New York, and the Northwestern Rail Telephone com pany of Omaha will be at the L ni ver sify of Nebraska, March 12 and 13, to interview College of Engineering eniors relative to positions and em ployment. It was to correct a condition in which the tail wagged the dog that the Wisconsin Cheese Producers' Sed eration was founded in 1913. This was the statement of Trank Swoboda, general manager of the fed eration in his address to the farmers of Wisconsin on "Merchandising." The federation cannot solve all tha problems of marketing when we han dle less than 10 per cent of the state's product," he declared. "We now have branches in every important district the state, and last year we mar keted our product in 3 states and sold some in Mexico as well. The cheese federation handled enough last year to load 100 train loads of 50 cars each or approximately 119,197,000 pounds of chees. We hope to increase tins amount until we handle 70 per cent of Wisconsin's cheese, he declared. "We are now working on our nation-wide market," asserted Mr. Swo boda. "We early learned the value of rigid standardization and quality pro duction we have established two qual ity brands in our "Mello-Creme" and "Federation" cheese. We are work "ng up the popularity of the names ot each of these. We are going to put on a merchandising expert soon. In this manner we hope to greatly stimulate the consumption of cheese in tho United States. Exactly 1.220 bachelor degrees were conferred by the University of Wis consin last year. About 70 children were treated for defective speech a ta clinic conducted during last summer session of the 'University of Wisconsin. Our new shirts are like the spirit of Spring itself attractive in pattern, exclusive in fabric now in unlimited selection! $2 upward MAGEE a SAY FELLOWS There's Two Good Places to Eat in Lincoln THE PARIS THE PALACE 1324 O St. 100S O St. A. A. ANDROS, Prop. Tucker - Sh ean 1123 0 STREET. Pean E. E. Sealock, of Teachers' College, is credited, by the Febru ary issue of The American Teacher, with doubling the attendance at his college during his first year as dean. Prof. L. E. Aylesworth, of the de partment of political science and so ciology, recently gave one of a series of addresses by University faculty members on the subject of "Repre sentative Government" before a meet- inz of the Acadmey of Science and -otters at Sioux City. Iowa. One hundred and twenty-five slides mane from pictures taken by Rev. Harry F. Huntington last summer in England, Scotland. France, Italy, Ger many, and Belgium, were shown by him last Friday in Social Scince Au ditorium under the auspices of Kappa Some 200 disabled soldiers enrolled last summer in the day classes in en gineering and commerce conducted in Milwaukee by the Badger University Extension division. "Distinguished rating" has been won in 1915, 1916, 1920, 1921 and 1922 by -the cadet corps of the University "of Wisconsin. Complete Supplies for All Departments of the University. DANCE We guarantee to teach you to dance in six lessons. MRS. T. E, WILLIAMS, B4258 1220D - " an. R5 M Indoor and Outdoor Athletic Equipment Everything for i-i y tj'uri, lll cluulng sweaters, jerseys, shoes, etc CataluQuc am t on rcjucrt Lawlor's Sporting Goods Co. Local Agent- TBI The work of a special commission in 1920 appointed by the federal court to investigate whether or not the gases from the smelters in the region of the Great Salt Lake were damaging the formers' crops, was de scribed by Dr. R. J. Pool, chairman of the department of botany, member of the commission, to the freshmen engineers Monday. Dean W. E. Sealock, of Teachers College, reports that the Cleveland THE WEAKIN' OF THE GREEN ST. PATRICKS DANCE ROSE WILDE SATURDAY NITE S1.00 PLUS TAX REFRESHMENTS WWW Dinner Dances Tasteful and Attractive iWAW.W The , ElKi Club Elks Club Building Cafe .v.w.w.v.v.v iB LUNCHEONS FOR STUDENTS Specially Priced Kt 35c and 45c fiWWfelCb It's the Best Place to Shop After All! For Your Easter- Get a new spring Kirsch baum suit at 34.75 WAVJVA Dinner Paities We excell in these. They are Attractive. VAVAV.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V- A PLEASANT REMEMBRANCE at all times YOUR PHOTOGRAPH AT Photo by Dole