JIIE DAILY NEBRASKAN The Daily Nebraskan 1'iililislu'il Smuliiy. Tuesday, WeUiii'itlny, TburMilny iiml Krlilny morning of each wek hv'llic I nlv.THily of NebruHka. iU'(Viu-il for iiiiiIIIiik lit npedul rate ot uutnvi- H . lli"l fr i Socllon 1WA. Act of OctoluT .'!. I'-t'". aiilhorlzod Juuuiiry 20, ll)2'- (KHIIAI. IMVIUSITV ITIIMCATIOJ Vmler li niroctlon of the Mtuilf nt l'ub llciil ion Hoard. Kiilt-ri'd an Hoeond-diiKH mutter ftt the pout off Ire in Unco'ii. Nohrntikn, under the Art of I'oiiirrrKH, Murrli 3, 1S70. KutiMrlptli.il rale a year 1.5 u NrineHter BhiKle ropy Flv CrnU Aililri'SH nil roiiimuiirHlloiiH to mi; nwi.Y MiiiiasKAN SiiiMon A. Lincoln, Nel. TKLKl'IION KS I iilversity H'J. KvenliiRN ltiMK'2 Kdiiorlnl iiml liualmwi offices In south west rornrr of lumeineiit of file Admiiila triilion Itiill. Herbert lirounell, Jr. ..Kdltor Murjorie Wymim Mnnuitliiic Killtw Helen Kuiiiiner C'linrleM A. Mlteliell llonuril Itufrett Knunett V. .Maun NHorlute Killlor , Mitht Killtur Mltlit Editor Mitht Kdltor Chauneey Klney ItuslneMi Manager Clifford M. IllrUn Clarence Klrklmff ...t. lloHlneH Slr. .Circulation Mummer OF KICK HOIKS. Kdltor. 4-."i dully. MamiKiii).' Kdi'or, H-fl dully. HuhImoss MjniiiL'rr. I ll dully. J'OK THIS ISSIK. Mlfht Kdllor Howard Huffett William Card Vnltant Sight Editor Hig-h School Fete Day, bringing to the Nebraska campus hundreds of students from Nebraka high .schools, is next Saturday. Bigger than ever before, the contests to be staged that day will be watched with interest in all parts of the state. In addition to the annual state track meet, there will be awards for the debating' championship, the best week ly and monthly newspapers and the winners in about a dozen academic contests. The number of events sponsored by the University is greater than ever bofore. Many high school students besides those entered in the interscholastic contests are planning to visit Lincoln on May 12. These visitors are all guests of the University. Many of them will soon decide whether or not they will come to Nebraska University next year, basing that decision largely on the impression that they receive of Ne braska's opportunities and Nebraska's spirit as exhibited on High School Fete Day. All students should be ready to extend a cordial welcome to the high school men and women of the state next Saturday. The attitude of the University to ward the contests is shown by this extract from a statement made by the Chancellor at the time the acad emic contests were announced: "We welcome contests in which a crown of laurel marks those who excel in academic efforts, as the leaf of laurel adorns those who win in games and physical events." attention given to the noisy, profli gate minority, prevalent in every walk of life, which abandons itself to three or four years of hilarity. Articles printed in the daily press would have us believe that the object in coming to college was to pass a few sessions in an agreeable freedom, in fearful anticipation of the years of toil await ing us after graduation; in other words, a method of respite from the world of affairs which threatened to engulf the unwilling matriculant. Despite all endeavors to convince us that the college student is a contra diction within himself, we have suffi cient faith in his parents who raised him, in the professors who teach him and in the man within him, to regard his future, not with despair, but with confidnece. McGill Daily. Notices (Notice of (tenerai interest will be printed In this column for two consecu tlve duyg. Copy should be In the Ne iiriiskHii office by five ocioek.i CORNHUSKER Applications for positions on the staff of the 1924 Cornhusker will be received until May 8, at the office of student activities, where blanks may be secured. The posi tions to be filled are: Editor, junior managing editor, business manager, and assistant business manager. A convocation of unusual interest comes on Friday of this week when the poet laureate of Nebraska John G. Neihardt will speak to students on "Education and Poetry". This will be the first opportun ity which Lincoln people have had to hear Mr. Neihardt since an nouncement was made that an ef fort was being made by at least one member of the Board of Regents to have the poet laureate connected with the University faculty. Mr. Neihardt has been offered a position in a col lege in another state and his many friends are anxious that Nebraska should not lose him. A special effort to make this con vocation one of the largest of the whole year will doubtless be made. The whole student body should take this time to meet and hear Nebraska's poet. Math. Club The last meeting of the Math. Club of the year will be held Wednesday. May 9, at 7:30, in room 102 Mechanic Arts. Professor Candy will give an illustrated lecture on "The Ten Digits with Variations." Christian Science Society Meeting of the Christian Science Society, Thursday evening at 7:30. Faculty Hall. Wesley Guild Wesley Guild business meeting Tuesday May S, Social Science 205. Election of officers. ! Faculty Women's Club Annual picnic of the Faculty Wo men's Club will be held at the Agri cultural Engineering building at the University Farm, Wednesday, May 9, at (5:15. All members will provide themselves with lunches, dishes, sil ver and sugar. Square and Compass The last regular meeting of the Square and Compass Club will be held at Faculty Hall. Temple building, Tuesday evening, May 8. Officers will be elected for next year and other important business will be taken up. All members are urged to attend. Math Club Picnic. The Math Club picnic which was called off Tuesday will be held Mon day, May 7. at 5:30. The members will meet at Antolope park just south of A street. DeMolay All DeMolays interested in baseball will meet Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock at 33rd and O streets for prac tice. IIUSKERS UPSET DOPE AND WIN BY DIG MARGIN (Continued from Page One). 100-yard dash Won by Fisher, Kansas; Lloyd, Nebraska, second; Noble, Nebraska, third. Time, 10 seconds. One-mile run Won by Allen, Ne braska; Meng, Kansas, second; Pratt, Kansas, third. Time, 4:39 3-5. 120-yard high hurdle Won by Lear, Nebraska; Graham, Kansas, second; Norton, Kansas, third. Time, 1G 1-5 seconds. 440-yard dash Won by Layton, Nebraska; Smith. Nebraska, second; Firebaugh, Kansas, third. Time, 50 2-5 seconds. Broad jump Won by Hatch, Ne braska; Graham, Kansas, second; Norton, Kansas, third. Distance, 22 feet 72 inches. Two-mile run Won by Slemmons, Nebraska; Cohen, - Nebraska, second, Allen, Nebraska, third. Time, 10:10. 220-yard dash won by Fisher, Kansas; Lloyd, Nebraska, second; Noble, Nebraska, third. Time, 214-5 seconds. Shot put Won by Hartman, Ne braska; Myers, Nebraska, and Nor ton, Kansas, tied for second and third. Distance, 41 feet, l'a inches. Pole vault Norton, Kansas, and Rogers, Kansas, tied for first and second; Riddlesbarger, Nebraska; third. Height, 11 feet 6 inches. 220-yard low hurdles Won by Crites, Nebraska; Kenner, Nebraska, second; Lear, Nebraska, third. Time, 24 4-5 seconds. (New varsity record for Nebraska.) Half-mile Won by Gardner, Ne braska, Coats, Nebraska, second; Meidlinger, Kansas, third. Time, 1:59 3-5. Discus throw Won by Myers, Ne braska; Norton, Kansas, second; Noble, Nebraska, third. Distance, 123 feet 6 inches. High jump Turner, Nebraska, and Poor, Kansas, tied for first and sec ond; Norton, Kansas, third. Height, 5 feet, 11 5-8 inches. Javelin throw Won by Wenke, Nebraska; Hartley, Nebraska, sec ond; Matthews, Kansas, third. Dis tance, 169 feet G inches. One-mile relay Won by Kansas, Shannon, Griffin, Firebaugh, Fisher. Time, 3:25 3-5. Calendar We have been told that the under graduate is spineless, we have been warned that he is headstrong; we have been informed that he is extrav gant, and the next word we hear is that he is parasitic; we learn that he is suited best for social teas, only to be assured in the next breath that he devotes all his time to athletics to the neglect of his studies and social welfare. His recreation is held up to contempt, and his attempts at se rious application, to derision. His life, according to the critics, is a con tinuous round of seeking after pleas ure and his lectures merely a cloak, and a means by which he contrives to dissipate his allowance and to waste his hours under the guiso of one pur posing a degree. In short, if we placed faith in all we read we should be forced to the conclusion that the student constituted a social anachron ism. Notice is not taken of the fact that the college student is peculiarly sit uated, that, though he is spending, he is sometimes earning. His position in a difficult and lax environment is ig nored. The opportunities open to the average collegian for enjoyment, and the absence of restraint receives scant acknowledgement The vast majority of university men, who carry them selves in the most exemplary and se date fashion, are overlooked in the Sunday, May 6 Y. W. C. A. Breakfast for staff, at 8:00; Ellen Smith Hall. Tuesday, May 8 ' Alpha Rho Tau banquet and initia tion, G to 8, Woodburn. Thursday, May 10 Christian Science Society, 7:30 Fac ulty Hall. Vi Df-lta initiation, Ellen Smith hall, G:00. The College of Pharmacy has re ceived from Dr. W. W. Stockberger. of the United States Department of Agriculture, several bulbs of schocn ocaulon officinale, which he secured from Venezuela. The Department of Agriculture is testing the growth of these in vai-ious part3 of the United States. A mixture of alkaloids called veratrine which is obtained from the seed3 is used externally a3 a sedative Refill With. " & I ?arifer35 Wyfi VrWAINPFJlilJ rvjh&l f'-MfoVo 'iuV.it 1 Thu! Made the Fountain Pen POSSIBLE" THE FABLE OF THE LAZY FARMER Once There was a Fella who was Registered in the Cow College better Known as the "Ag" College and This Fella was Stuck-up and Lazy so he did Not go out to Help the rest of the Fellas round up the Steers and wrangle the Punkins so one Cool afternoon Be Fore Farmers' Fair the Fellas got him and Ducked him in The Tank And wore out seven Taddles on him so On Saturday he stood Up and sliced onions All Day Be cause he could Not sit Down. The Nebraska Law Bulletin (Num ber V) for April on "Agency" by Dean Seavey, is being distributed. This bulletin contains the first group of cases read upon that subject in the course on agency in the college. Subsequent bulletins will contain more Nebraska cases. Chapter I deals with the nature of agency and Chapter II with the power of agents. Prof. Louise Pound, of the depart ment of English, who has just re turned from giving two lectures at Austin, Texas, found herself the best advertised person in the city on r rival; her brother, Dean Roscoe Pound of the Harvard Law School, had been in Austin the week before addressing the Legislature and giving five lectures before the faculty and students of the law school of the Uni versity of Texas. Professor Pound nil that she made her entrance as "Dean Pound's sister' which, however, was no new experience for ner. Dr. R. A. Lyman, dean of the Col lege of Pharmacy, has been invited to be the honor guest at the annual meetinfr of the New Jersey State - i Pharmaceutical Association at Dover, , June 12-15, and to give an address on "Sane Education in Pharmacy." ntb&p st. OUTSIDE FOUNTAIN SERVICE Rector's Pharmacy 13th and P "Drive Up to Our Curb See Europe By Motorcycle! Wonderful, new plan tor Ameri can! to tour burope at small ex pense. Get a Harlev-Davjdson new or used with or without sidecar -when you reach Paris. Ride wherever you want battle fields. Airs, Germany, anywhere. Paris dealer AGRKES to buy back motorcycle for twO'thuds of net purchase price, without delay, when you finish your tour. Writ toiUy fur full informatioo About thia amaain plan. Harlev-Davidson Motor Co. Milwaukee, Wrieconaln X II S W II 1 . r --i a, - ...aiMJ Jewelry On Easy Terms For a limited time we are offering $30 Diamond Rings at $.'59.50 on terms of $4.00 per month and you wear the ring out on the first payment of 23c. These rings are a special purchase from Amsterdam and are values unheard of be fore. Wonderful sparklers in fancy carved mountings. Again we wish to call your attention to a special Elgin Watch off er. For 25c the first payment and $4.00 per month we are offering a 17-Jewel Elgin Boulevard Watch in a hand somely engraved case guaranteed for 23 years. This is a piece of mechanism that will last you a life time. 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