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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 8, 1924)
THE DAILY WERRASKAN BULLETIN OF SUMMER SESSION IS ON PRESS Registration for 1924 Vacation Period School Set for June 6, 7 and 9 The annual Summer School bulle tin for 1924 is on the press and wil be ready for distribution within a few days. The registration dates for the 1924 summer session are June 6, 7, and 9. Classes for the first term begin June 10 and close July 16. The second term classes begin July 17 and close August 22. Some additional courses, especial ly in rural education and 3chool ad ministration, will be offered. As has been customary in the past sessions, a number of instruct ors not on the regular University fac ulty will take charge of some of the classes. It is hoped by Dean Sealock of the Teachers College, who has charge of the 1924 summer session, that last year's record of an enrollment of 2,000 will be surpassed. The summer session is planned to cffer unusual opportunities to the teachei of the state as well as to serve the needs of regular students who desire to shorten their collegiate course. MASSACHUSETTS: Examination of 903 Harvard freshmen showed that upward of 70 per cent of them have systolic murmurs in their hearts, but less than 2 per cent have actual organic heart disease. IRISH SCHEDULE SIX BIG TEAMS FOR 1924 Half Dozen Major Squads on Successive Saturdays to Give Micks Trouble. MISSOURI: A committee of fac ulty members of Columbia Univer sity has been appointed for the Mark Twain memorial fund campaign The fund is to preserve the birth place of Mark Twain at Florida and to make it into a park. The cam paign throughout the United States is to raise $150,000. Notre Dame's football schedule for 1924. as announced by Head Coach K. K. Rockne. far surpassed any other schedule that the Irish have ever play ed, in fact that any school in the his tory of the American football has ever played. On schedule appear games with six of the nation's major teams, and two others that may not prove to be walkaways. The schedule is: Oct 4 Lombard at South Bend Oct 11 Wabash at South Bend Oct 18 Army at New York. Oct 25 Princeton at Princeton. Nov. 1 Georgia Tech., at South Bend. Nov. 8 Wisconsin at Madison. Nov. 15 Nebraska at South Bend Nov. 22 Carnegie Tech., at Pitts burg. The fact that so many big teams are to be met is not so outstanding as the fact that they are to be met on consecutive dates. Rockne has al wavs been noted for giving his team plenty of hard games, but his 1924 schedule is more strenuous than any- LOU HILL 1309 O SL Up one flirbt, turm te the rifkt COLLEGE CLOTHES High Class But Not High Priced. thing that has yet been planned for any team. Four home games and four trips annear on the Irish schedule. Iroba bly the fact that the student body has been clamoring for more home games to this arrangement Also it will be remembered by every one who saw the huskers win from the Irish last Armistice day, that Rockne has wnrld of material very little of which is lost to him, by graduation this year. With enough of capable substitutionit is not impossible for a team to tro through a successful sea son with such a schedule. It seems however to be Quite in keeDine with theeneral run of af fairs that the Irish should be the first to innovate such a stiff series of games , since they have always ranked among the best teams in the nation. It will be noticed that the Nebras ka game comes late in the season and is the peak of ! Micks schedule. Next year's g between the two schools shoulu s-lj rank as one of the best among a scant dozen or more games that have ever been played on American college gridirons. 8 Call B4423 We Deliver ILLERS RESCRIPTION HARMACY Sixteenth A O. 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SITTINGS FOR JUNIOR PICTURES (Continued from Page 1) Gleason, Ruth Gnam, Martin Go eins, Blanche Goodrich, Elisabeth Eric Gray, Charles Green, Eulalia Grether, Ruth Groves, Ethelwyn Gu lick, Pauline Gund, Elmer Gustafson, Clark Guston, Helen Guthrie, Emma Hageman, Emma Hagenow, Harold Hahlbeck, Edmund Hald, Merle Hale, Earl Hall, Dorothy Hallgren, John Hamilton, Hope Hanson, Howard Hanson, Maxwell Hanson, Donald Hare, George Hargreaves, Marjorie Harmon, Ed Harney, Charles Harris, Esther Harrison, Rachel Harry, John tj.ciail r?Ai-trade Haslam, Lewis Hastings, Velma Hatch, Lena Hauke, Eva May Hawk, Orval Hawk, Maxine Orve Hedden. George Hen derson, GOes Henkle, Jay Hepperly, Martin Hier, Floyd Higgins, ueorge Hill, Myreta Hill, Robert Hill, Aileen Hilliard, Wfliam Hilliker, Frana Hitchcock, John Hoagland, Karl TTnWit. Helen Hoffman, Ollie Hoff man, Lyle Holland, Don Hollenbeck, Hills 0uingsworth, Eva Household er, Ruth Huff, mranic tiumon, no hurt Huston, Hugh Hutton, John Hyatt, Marie Irwin, Jean Issenhuth, Cb'de Ivers, Eliiabeth Jack, Emma Jackman, Frank Jacobs, Christina Jacobsen, Glen Jeffewon, Viola Je linek, Fern Jenkins, George Jenkins, Arthur Jersild, Lawrence Jessop, Ir vin Jetter, Anrilla Johnson, Frank Johnson, Gorge Johnson, Grace Johnson, Harold Johnson, Irma John son, Lillian Johnson. LOST p. U. sister' pi. Retupn . 1411 rt trf pv.JI Ycurn to . . uuna x3437a LOST Short strandTalnT Q street. Phone B6450 . 10 GIRL wanted to work for boaTHI room and some pay. Two in w ily. Mrs. Jack Werner, 1910 tT St, Phone F1911. RENT-A-FORD-Shove it yT Munson Motor Co., phones Bm and B1517. 1125 P St Business Administration and Secretarial Training Register This Week we help you Thorough and practical courses succeeu to LINCOLN BUSINESS COLLEGE Accredited by Nat'l Asan of Accrd Cm'l Schooh L. B. C. Bid. 14th and P Sts. B6774 lit y0, - iKM s V-?0 A smart group of pretty girls with "Irene" coming to the Orpheum Wednesday and Thursday, Ja S-lfi, matinee Thursday. - f li x PuhlUhtdin the interest tf Elec trical Development H en Institution &t vill U helped ij what ever helps the Industry. are you sure you deserve it? "Give me a log with Mark Hopkins at one end of it and myself at the other," said, in effect. President Garfield, "and I would not want a better college. But if Mark Hopkins was an inspired teacher, it is j ust as true that James A. Garfield was an inspir ing student. Sometimes Garfield's praise of bis professor is quoted in disparagement of present day faculties the assumption being that we as listeners are sympathetic, all that we ought to be and that it b the teacher who has lost his vision. Is this often the case? It is the recollection of one graduate at least that he did not give his professors a chance. Cold to their enthusiasms, he was prone to regard those men more in the light of animated text-books than as human beings able and eager to expound their art or to go beyond it into the realm of his own personal problems. This is a man to man proposition. Each hasto go halfway. Remember, there are two ends to the log. Western Electric Company Wherever people loeh to electricity for tha comforts and conveniences tf life today, th Western Electric Company offers a service as broad as tha functions of electricity itself. f The Fountain Pen Possible' Ml