The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, May 06, 1926, Page 3, Image 3

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THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
ttauuM'MT)
THE DAVIS SCHOOL
SERVICE
W Plata Tuihn
Enrollment BofliclHni
118 No. 12th St.
Over Idyl Hoar Cf
EAT AT
Commercial Lunch
1238 ."O" St.
Under New Management
The
Davis Coffee
Shop
108 No. 13th St.
Featuring
Toaitad Bread Sandwiches. Chicken
FIm. Th Bsst of Paltry and Unex
celled Coffee.
Open Day and Night Student
Lincoln
ALL
THIS
WEEK
MOVING PICTURES
ANNUAL
Farmers' Fair
HELD BY THE STUDENTS
COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA
MAY 1ST.
PARADE ON CAMPUS
THE FARMERS' FAIR BOARD
DANCE FROM THE PAGEANT '
SNORPHEUM ENTERTAINERS
DOUGHNUTS FOR THE CROWf
8,000 PEOPLE AT THE FAIR
One of the Public Theaters
Lincoln Theatre
THIS WEEK
Powerful Drama of New York'
Criminal Court
"THE BLIND
GODDESS"
A Paramount Picture with
ERNEST TORRENCE, JACK HOLT
ESTHER RALSTON
LOUISE DRESSER
National Mulc Week
"FINGALS CAVE"
LINCOLN SYMPHONY
Jean L. Schaefer, Cond.
Wilbur CheiwtwethgOnranUt
MOTHER'S DAY FILM
Accompanied by Victor Electrota
Wilbur Chenowetlhe0f:an
NEWS FABLES FASHION
iiAiiro a T T Q
MAT 35c NITE 60c CHILD 10c
LYRIC
ALL
THIS WEEK
...National M(ile and Fun Week-
The.Rollicklne Thrill
Comedy Seneation
"Partners Again"
With the Famou Screen Funter
Geore Sidney and Alexander Carr
"MOVING DAY"
A New Helen and Warren Comedy
"MOTHER MY DEAR"
A Timely Orthophonlc Clanlc
ON THE STAGE
Vera Walton & Co.
PreMntmc the Vocal Novelty
"SONG COMPARISONS"
SHOWS AT 1, S, 5, 7, 9.
ri rMI K I ALL THIS
VALAJUlilLi WEEK
BIG DOUBLE BILL
A Traa-lc Romance of the South Sea
William Fox Praent
"YELLOW
FINGERS"
HAROLD LLOYD
"AMONG THOSE PRESENT
"FlCHtlNGJHEARTS
SHOWS AT 1, 3, S, 7,
nSalto Theater
ALL LTHIS WEEK
Corrino OrtfOth In Edna Ferber bif
Heart Drama
"CLASSIFIED"
A First National Picture
CHARLES MURRAY
JACK MULHALL .
Educational Comedy
"HOLD YOUR HAT"
NEWS T0PICS-R EVteWS
discovery-Might
friday night letjs co
SHOWS AT 1. S. ..
MAT 88c NITE 85c CHILD 10c
ajBygsBRK!8KSniaMI
BSE"!
VtaTEVXRYBGCYC0cs
THUR FRI SAT.
The English Boy from America
Val & Ernie Stanton
In a Satire Entitled
"KEEP IT UNDER YOUR HAT"
ZUHN DREIS
Demontu Americano
Habitat North Amrica
INTERNATIONAL JAZZ EVIEW
GEO. . FLO
Ford & Cunningham
"EVEN AS YOU AND I"
by
Jark Lalt A Blah- Trey nor
DELLA O'DELL
The Utile Lady with the Samson
Lik Strenjtb
"A SWELL AFFAIR"
A New Comedy
"THE RADIO DETECTIVE"
Stun Chapter
FOX NEWS
SHOWS AT 2:30, 7:O0, 9:00
1
The University of Nebraska
Official Daily Bulletin
VOL. I.
THURSDAY,
R. O. T. C.
All R. 0. T. C. men will be excused
from classes Friday afternoon. Com
panies E and G and all advanced
course men will also be excused Fri
day morning for inspection.
CARL C. ENGBERG,
Executive Dean.
Engineers
All engineering classes will be dis
missed and engineering students will
be excused from other classes for the
Engineering Convocation Thursday,
May 6, at 11 o'clock, and all Saturday
forenoon, May 8.
CARL C. ENGBERG,
Executive Dean.
MISCELLANEOUS NOTICES
Awfwan Staff
All copy for the last issue of the
Awgwan must be in by Saturday, May
8. This will be the Commencement
number.
Senior
Mr. G. A. R. Solcum of the Skelly
Oil Company and other officers of
that concern will be on the campus
Thursday. They will meet sen
iors in Mr. Bullock's office in S. S.
806 from 9 to 12 and from 2 to 4.
Mr. Solcum will give a talk of general
interest at S. S. 306 at 11 o'clock.
Experiments Show Bad Effects of
Lack of Sleep on Mental Faculties
Recent experiments conducted by
H. R. Laslett, graduate student in the,
Stanford psychology department, in
which five students remained 72
hours without sleep, indicate strongly
that lack of sleep has a deteriorating
effect on the higher mental faculties.
The tests were conducted to dem
onstrate the truth or falsity of the
modern theory that "sleep is a
Engineers Ready
For Open House
(Continued from Page One)
ing, turning, and shaping iron, steel.
and brass will be snown. Students
will be at work on all the lathes,
milling machines, slotters, drills,
saws, gear-cutting machines, and
planers in the shop. Articles made
by students taking courses in ma
chine shop work will also be on dis
play in this laboratory.
Will Make Liquid Air
In the basement equipment will be
in operation making liquid air.
By means of powerful microscopes,
the structure of metals will be ex
plained, and the effect of tempering
and annealing and other similar pro
cesses will be shown.
In the foundry, located on t'hc
main floor, molten iron will be pour
ed into molds which have been set
by students. The method of making
molds, cores, and other apparatus
used in the foundry will be demon
strated. The cupalo in which iron
is melted will be open for inspection
and people will be allowed to look
through the peep holes at the white
hot mass of seething iron.
Displays of fancy wood turning
and laminated wood objects will also
be found on the second floor of the
Mechanical Engineering building.
The civil engineering exhibit will
be in Mechanic Arts building. Use
will also be made of the Applied Me
chanics laboratory. Steel bars will
be pulled in two and knots will be
tied in them, concrete cylinders and
beams will be crushed and broken
by machines capable of exerting
forces of 200,000 pounds.
Model on Diaplay
Models and drawings of bridges,
dams, and other civil engineering
achievements will be on display.
A large assortment of surveying in
struments and equipment will be on
exhibit on the first floor.
The Architectural Engineers will
have a large number of drawings, col
or washes, and art drawings on dis
play in various rooms. A model of
th "Cathedral of Learning" of the
University of Pittsburgh will be
shown, with the windows lit up as
at night. The Agricultural Engin
eers will also have a display of rural
architecture, irrigation and drainage
drawings in the Mechanic Arts
building.
In the Electrical Engineering lab
oratory will be found exhibits of an
tinuatcd and modern electrical equip
ment. Demonstrations with high fre
quency current, the X-ray, powerful
Blortro-mairnets. and other myster
ious electrical devices will be given.
Generators, transformers, dynamos
mnA motors will be in operation and
many interesting stunt will be per
formed with their aid.
Eperimet with High Voltage
The burning and piercing of lirge
glass and porcelain insulators will be
demonstrated by means of a huge
high voltage transformer. Various
types of swithboards and apparatus
for automttic switching will be an
interesting part of the display.
The geology department will ex
hibit models of equipment used for
mining, drilling oil wells, and other
similar operations. A display of
minerals, rocks and precious stones
will be in the Museum.
The University power plant will be
in full operation and opn for inspec
tion. This plant furnishes heat and
MAY 6, 1926.
NO. 46
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
Scabbard and Blade Luncheon
Scabbard and Blade luncheon in
l.unor of the Blue Star government
inspection board, Friday, May 7, 12
o'clock sharp, at the Lincoln Hotel.
University Che Club
Chess Club meeting Saturday, May
8, at 7:30 in the Y. M. C. A. room at
the Temple. All interested are in
vited.
Univenity Advertising Club
The University Advertising Club
will hold a dinner and meeting for
all students interested in advertising
Thursday at 6 p. m., at the Grand
Hotel. The tickets will be 60c.
Speakers have been secured to talk
on subjects of interest to all adver
tising students.
Big Sister Initiation ,
Big Sister Initiation Thursday at
5 o'clock at the Agricultural cantons.
Street cars leave thirteenth and O
at the hour and every fifteen minutes
and interurban cars leave everv
twenty minutes from fourteenth and
S. Tickets for the picnic sunner
which will be,served are 85c, and may
be bought at Miss Elsie Piper's desk
in the Dean of Women's office.
W. A. A.
Election of sports managers to
be held Friday from nine to four in
the Armory. Every member vote.
habit" and not necessary to physical
well-being. Though no harm was
suffered by the students in the ex
periments, it was shown that sleep is
vital to man's health.
. Sleep has been tehown to have
"depth" as well as length, and it is
possible for a man to extract bene
fit by sleeping hard for a short time,
as was the case on an average of four
hour's sleep a night.
light to the city campus and light to
the Agricultural campus. People
will be permitted to pass down into
the boiler room and see the automa
tic stokers in operation. The large
Corliss engine and generator that
produces the electric current will be
in operation.
Program To Be Distributed
Confections will be sold at stands
located at various points about the
campus. A twelve page program will
be distributed to people attending
Engineers' Night It will contain
directions for getting to the various
displays, as well as time of the more
spectacular events.
Plans are being laid for entertain
ing over 7,000 people this year.
Many are expected from towns and
cities throughout the state. An
nouncements have been broadcast
from several radio' stations in Ne
braska and articles have been pub
lished in Lincoln and Omaha news
papers. s
On The Air
University Studio, broadcasting
over KFAB (840.7)
9:30 to 9:55 a. m. Weather re
port by Prof. T. A. Blair. Road re
port and announcements.
(Other periods silent.)
CHRYSLER SEDANS and NEW
FORDS for rent. Reliable service
day or night Motor Out Company,
1120 P Street. 188.
The Luncheonette
Formerly Ledwich Tastie Shop
143 No. 12th St.
Light Lunches Fountain Service Confectionery
Open Until Midnight
Make This Your Home
ORPHEUM THEATRE
Friday and Saturday
AMERICAN LEGION POST NO. 3
presenting
University Players
In that play with a thousand thrills
"SP
o
Mysterious hands, terrifying scenes, stalking, invisible
Death, and a thousand laughs. - - - All in "Spooks"
and you'll like it
SPECIAL STUDENT'S MATINEE SATURDAY 75c
All evening seats $100
WE SECOND
THE MOTION!
STUDENTS TEACHING THEIR
TEACHERS
(Boston Transcript)
"All our colleges now seem to be
asking their students to assume, for
a time, the task of teaching their
teachers. Dartmouth led the way in
this matter, soliciting from the under
graduates a very complete report
of their views of higher education as
supplied them at Hanover, what they
think is good about it and what they
think is wrong. Bodwoin and Mid
dlebury have likewise sought counsel
of their seniors and sophomores, their
juniors and freshmen. And now the
ink has scarcely dried up on the re
port of the Harvard Student Council
'committee on education,' when the
students of Yale, at the direct in
stance of President Angell, begin the
making of a similar canvass. The
questionnaire issued to students at
New Haven today is believed to be, if
anything, a more extensive inquiry
into student opinion, a more search
ing request for light upon the stu
dent's own way of stating his hopes,
ambitions and needs, and what he
thinks the university can do to help
fulfill them, than any yet issued.
"What an extraordinary develop
ment this is in the collegiate world!
Fifty or more years ago it would have
been quite unthinkable. In an Ameri
can college of the eighteenth or nine
teenth century any proposal that the
students should be asked to state in
public what they thought of their
teachers and teaching, would not
merely have been considered horrible,
"t would have been horripilant. Chills
and fever of outraged authority
would have shaken the whole faculty
from the president down to the
youngest assistant instructor. Nor
was the situation greatly altered no
longer than 15 years ago. We have
in mind a certain undergraduate
editor of a New England college
newspaper. Constantly, in 1911 and
1912, he strove to make the point
that it was important for the admin
istrators of a college to know what
the undergraduates were thinking.
He held this true whether the stu
dents were right or wrong, and per
haps more important if they were
wrong, as very likely they might be,
than if they were right. For he ar
gued the greatest task of a college
is to encourage right thinking. If an
inquiry would show that the stu
dents', for the most part, were think
ing wrongly about various matters
of their collegiate education and
teaching, why wasn't it very import
and for the authorities to discover
this? The reasoning seemed cor
rect, but 15 years ago it awakened
no official response in any quarter.
"Today, as has been said, the
theory of the worth of students'
opinion concerning their studies and
indeed all phases of collegiate life,
seems to be winning sudden and
widespread acceptance. It is odd,
it may even be thought to tread upon
dangerous ground; but on the whole
it appears very salutary. Thruout
the grade schools and the secondary
schools the last two decades have
witnessed an immense increase of
self-criticism and of scientific peda
gogical analysis. The colleges, for the
most part, have not shared in such
surveys. It has been all very well for
collegiate departments of education
to conduct surveys of preparatory
schools and their teaching, but since
the colleges themselves stand as the
courts of highest Tesort in the world
of education, the practical question
has been, 'Who should act, in turn,
as their surveyors?' Apparently, the
answer is being found, in some part
by seeking out college student opin
ion. Since the responsible heads of
our colleges reserve to themselves all
authority in determining what part
of the students' report is valuable,
and what part is pure bunkum, the
possible benefits of the movement
far outweigh its risks."
o
Calendar
Friday May 7
Tau Kappa Epsilon, Spring Party
Rosewilde.
Kappa Rho Sigma House Dance
Kappa Kappa Gamma, Spring
Party Lincoln Hotel.
All MethodiBt Picnic Auto Park.
Silver Serpent Tea Ellen Smith
Hall.
Saturday, May 8
Union Literary Picnic Crete.
Kappa Sigma House Dance.
Palladian Literary, Spring Party
Elks Club.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Spring
Party Scottish Rite Temple.
Beta Theta Pi House Dance.
Farm House House Dance
Lutheran Club, Party Temple.
Alpti Delta Theta, Spring Party
Rosewilde.
May Morning Breakfast Cam
pus.
Sunday, May 9
Delta Tau Delta Open House. .
Convocation For
Engineers Today
(Continued from Page One)
at 10 o'clock. At 1:30 the winners
of these games meet to decide the
championship.
Banquet Saturday Evening
A new event has been introduced
this year, a volley ball tournament.
It will be held during the morning.
There will also be a horse-shoe pitch
ing tournament, and tug-of-war,
chain rice, and level race. Prizes
will be given in all events of indivi-
Eia5)5J3ai3I5J3iaiSIS)SiaEISI5Ic
LEARN TO DANCE
Mr. Luella G. WUHams will teach
fen to dance In six private lesson.
Phono for appointment
fd Pkane B 425k - Studio 1220 D
MSISiBISISISEIBlHTflTiOT
is
Jocaifs Smari Sijes
Shoes you will admire and enjoy.
They will give you pleasure at
every Step. You will feel good
all over when you satisfy your
feet with a pair of these fine
looking Florsheims.
TieFrat$lQ
r t ft h mute of J6$jipemhimr good fMhen
SkeUttm Xmed "',
A Short Cut to
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CILILEG!IAti?E
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Sea
dual competition. Lunch will be
served by ladies of Grace M. E.
church at 12 o'clock.
In the evening a banquet will be
held at the University Club. Several
speakers will be on the program for
the evening. Copies of the engineer
ing scandal sheet, The Sledge, will be
distributed.
First Engineers'
Night in 1895
(Contrnt;eS Prom Pag One)
day is this year celebrating its elev
enth birthday. Each year it has been
made larger and more spectacular,
and this year should be no exception
The Week is now composed of a pep
meeting, parade, convocation, open
house, field day, and banquet. As
in former days, open house or En
gineers' Night i sstill the largest sin
gle event. It is at this time that an
effort is made to acquaint other stu
dents and people throughout the
state with Nebraska's engineering
college. The remaining events are
given in an attempt to bind the stu
dents studying engineering a little
more closely together, and to create
a spirit of fellowship among the stu
dent body as a whole.
WANT ADS
ATTENTION: Sororities and Fra
ternities. Fine brick, oak-finished
sorority or fraternity building with
dormitory, for rent. Now occupied
by sorority. Paul Goss, B 4108,,
233, South 13th St
University Students who woud like
to earn $650 during summer vaca
tion see C. R. Anstaett, Room 414.
Hotel Lincoln, 9-12 a. m. and 3-5 and
7-9 p. m. Tuesday. Adv.
NOTICE: A large brown stone
house suitable for a small frater
nity or sorority house. J Just a real
home like place. Large double gar
age, hot water heat power oil burn
er. Located at 145 North 33rd St.
$125 a month. You must see this
horn eto appreciate it. Possession at
once. Call F 1778. 138
eSht Gone tfCmd
nunciations and use in its 1,256 pages.
illustrations. Includes dic
tionaries of biography and geog
and other special features.
Printed on Bible Paper.
Jtmt Vbor College tore
or Write for norme' the
PobUmher: Free t p ttnen
pagoe if you name thie paper.
G.&.C Merriam Co.
Springfield, Mass.
n u n rm
Get Ready for Sum
mer at the Apex
Cleaners & Dyers!
it's open season for cool,
light silken frocks; the psycho
logical time to get white flan
nels in readiness! Call the
Apex if you would have last
summer's apparel refreshed to
the degree of satisfaction which
lessens your desire for new
things. White clothes come
back WHITE not with that
grayish tone which bespeaks
overworked cleaning fluid. Col
ored clothes come back with
each and every tint beautiful
ly revivified, and with fabric
enlivened. The Apex is locat
ed at 123 S. 23rd, with P. M.
Plamondon as president Phone
B3331.
Mother Would Like
A Personal Gift
From Mayer Bros!
here are things to select for
mothers who prefer chiffon
hose to crocheted fascinators;
for mothers who can give their
daughters a pointer or two
about what's what in Vopue this
month; for mothers who refuse
to be relegated (yet) to the An
cient Order of Elderly Femin
inity. For such mothers (and
that takes in most all of yours)
Mayer Bros, has the Mother's
Day Gifts that will be appre
ciated. Dainty silk underthings,
smart neckwear, beautiful
scarfs, fine gloves, handker
chiefs, hosiery, and items ad in
finitum! Value-Marvels in Silk
Hose at Kinney's!
here at last is the place to
buy below-knee apparel at a
saving! If you want a pair of
all silk chiffon hose that will
look as well as they wear, ask
for Kinney's special at $1.79.
Among the sturdier stockings,
two numbers are especially
worthy of mention; an all
thread silk service hose at $1.29
apair, and an all thread silk
service hose at 89c a pair. All
these, of course, are obtainable
in every fashionable shade, so
come to Kinney's and prepare
for any and all runners!
New Summer Dress
es for $16.95 at
The Famous!
bought especially for those of
you who must keep in the fash
ion swim at the least possible
outlay! Gay little sports frocks
of striped tub silks; adorable
little chiffon dresses that will
swell the ranks of heavy suit
ors. The styles are collegiate,
the colors are legion, the price
will make a hit with even the
most depleted allowance. Shop
at the Famous too, for the
smart little things of dress;
blouses, vestees, silk under
things, scarfs, hose, bags all
surprisingly attractive, and
surprisingly low priced.
New Picture Frames
at Eastman Kodak
Stores, Inc!
artistic swinging or easel
frames that will set off to per
fection your most cherished
photographs! And if you wish
de luxe framing for fraternity,
sorority or other group picture,
bring them to Eastman Kodak
Stores, Inc. (formerly Lincoln
Photo Supply Co. at 1217 O.)
Bring them this woek; then
chooHe your Mother's Day gifts
at the Kume time. Whether you
select a handsome card, a fram
ed motto, or some highly indi
vidual gift, mother in sure to
be pleased with anything that
comes from the Ea'tmen Ko
dak Stores, Inc.
m r r f r r-. .