The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, May 23, 1926, Page 3, Image 3

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    THE DAILY NEBRASKaN
The University of Nebraska
Official Daily Bulletin
VOI- I.
SUNDAY, MAY 23, 102(5.
Psycholojy.
The department of philosophy
wishes to call attention to the change
in Thilosophy 10 (Introductory
Psychology), heretofore riven as a
five-hour course each semester,
which will be given, beginning Sep
tember 1926, as a three-hour course,
Philosophy 101, and continued the
second semester as Philosophy 102.
185. History and Principles
Of Journalism
A special make-up examination
covering Payne's "History of Jour
nalism in the United States" will be
held Monday evening at 7 in U 106
or student delinquent froln the
first semester.
G. C WALKER.
82. Ntn Writing and Reporting
Copy strings (clipping of printed
new- stories) and copy files (re
turned assignments) are due in the
office of the School of Journalism by
Monday noon. Fasten each set se
curely. G. C WALKER.
Freshman English
Students who have C's or I's re
corded against them in Freshman
Knglish under Mr. Stepanek may dis
harce their delinquency by passinr
fie ..oneral examination Friday, May
$, at 8 a. m., in Law 101, 104, 107.
nd 202.
CornliBslcer Bills
Organizations which have space in
Tribute Paid to
Professor Fogg
(Continued from Page One)
kirn to come to the University of Ne
braska for only one year.
Left Only During War
'Professor Fogg's service at Ne
braska, interrupted only by a leave of
absence when be was with the educa
tional dpsrtment of the A. E. F. in
France, began in 1901 and continued
up to the time of his final illness.
"Nearly all of his friends assem
bled here are familiar with his re
cord. I need not dwell upon it. It
was evident from the moment of his
arrival that a vigorous, virile person
ality had entered the campus. A num
ber of those friends here to do him
honor were members of his famous
debating teams and worked with him
in his "Think Shop." Stimulating stu
dents to think received emphasis at
his hands long before it became a
popular subject of discussion in aca
demic circles. His desire to cause
students to think led to his desire to
lead them in forcefully, accurately
and fearlessly expressing their con
victions. Thinking was the basis of
his work in argumentation; his work
in argumentation naturally directed
his attention to journalism, a iield
in which he had experience before
coming to Nebraska. His work in the
field of journalism has been, with
1he modest resources at his disposal,
highly successful and greatly appre
ciated by the young men and women
who attended his classes, as well as
by the press of the state. If his life
could have been prolonged and his
services continued for ten years
more, I have no doubt that the stu
dents whom he was training in jour
nalism would make as relatively large
jilaces for themselves as the gardu
ates of his argumentation classes
have made in public life.
"In such a time of solemnity and
sorrow as this I wish, however, to
speak of some of his personal charac
teristics perhaps a little less known
and appreciated than his public- serv
ices. A Tireless Worker
"One of the fundamental causes
for his success was his tireless in
dustry. He literally wore himself
out prematurely through his devotion
to duties, partly imposed on him, and
partly self-imposed. He never
thought of rest or recreation. His
thoughts were always directed to
wards the university, its broader in
terests, his immediate departmental
interests, and, above all, lis own stu
dents. No task was too great for him
to undertake, no duty too ansignifi-
WANT ADS
WANTED: Solicitor for special
edition. Must be a go-getter.
CaD B 25 64,. 203 ErowneU Elock,
Lincoln.
WANTED: Students with selling
experience. Good proposition for
summer months. No canvassing.
Start immediately. Apply Choppy
Hhodes, 226 South ICth. 150
STUDENTS WANTED : Summer 1
work of the most ple.asa.nt and pro-
fittble form is open to a limited j
number of University of Nebraska j
students. A canvassing proposition i
which pays a commission of 80 per
cent and a bonus for total volume
f sales. The products will always
assure you an audience. Write or
telephone at once to W. J. Cole.
l.09 O street, Havelock, Phone S7W, 1
or Daily Nebraskan C7. 15 j
If the party who tok the Remington '
Portable Typewriter from the
counter at the Temple Wednesday
night, will return it at once to the j
office bf the University ' Players,
there will be no questions asked
WANTED : Typing! Theses, man-
UKcripts, radio talks or articles, j
Su-ncils and mimeographing. Call !
NO. 68.
the Cornhusker and have not paid
their bills should make arrangement
to do so at once.
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
Catholic Student Club
The members of the Catholic Stu
dent Club will receive Conmunion in
a body at the 8 o'clock Mass at the
Cathedral, Sunday, May 23. This
will be followed by a breakfast and
business meeting at I.e Petit Gour
met. At this meeting will be the an
nual election of officers and other
important business.
St. Paul's Church Croup.
The young people of the St. Paul's
Methodist church will hold their an
nual May breakfast at the St. Paul's
Methodist church. May 23, at 8
o clock in the morning.
Adrertiting Club
Advertising Club will elect offi-
cers at a meeting Tuesday r.oon at
the Grand Hotel. Lunch will be
served.
Camma Alpha Chi
Gamma Alpha Chi will meet Tues
day at 5 p. m. in U Hall J0i5.
Iron Sphinx
There will be an Iron Sphinx meet
ing, Tuesday night, at 7:30, at the
Kappa Sigma House.
Student Council
Student Cou.icil meeting Monday
at 5 o'clock in Faculty Hall, The
Temple.
cant to command his attention.
"He was an unusually right-minded
man, ideal in his home relations
ideal in his attitude toward his coun
try during the great war. He was
ardent in his support of principles,
yet tolerant of those who could not
see with the same clear ision the
principles that he espoused.
"He was one of the most loyal
and unselfish of men. I have known
few men in any great organization
who so gladly saw the advancement
of others, who worried so little about
his own relative recognition.
Lived in World of Thought
"He enjoyed intellectual compan
ionship and social life in the finer
academic sense. In the lower sense
he was untouched by the desire to
participate strongly in what may be
termed the worldliness of a prosper
ous community, and he exhibited the
wise frugality of the best representa
tives of those who walk through in
the w-orld of thought and not in the
world of sense.
"During the many informal dis
cussions that I have had with him,
ranging in lighter vein over a wide
variety of topics, there was one thing
that I always noticed his reverence
towards things spiritual, his respect
for organized religion, and his sym-'
pathy towards all who were trying in
any way to benefit humanity. j
"Ferhaps most interesting of all to
me is the attitude that his former
students feel toward him. This is
most difficult for me to express ade
quately. The regard of his students
was cumulative. At first they would
see only the exterior. Their atti
tude towards him was one of constant
progress. He never tried to make
the callow freshmen adore him, but
he stimulated them. The progression
might be as follows: First, ques
tioning; then recognition, followed
by appreciation. Appreciation pass
ed to enthusiasm, enthusiasm to ven
eration. This course of mental pro
gress was true, not only of students
who were satisfactory from the start,
but of those whom he was obliged to
discipline most severely. Few people
have been able to produce as fine re
sults as he out of material that at
the beginning seemed in a few in
stances rather unpromising. A part
of the secret of this is that the stu
dents came to see that be had bound
less affection for them and a most
sincere desire 4"or their progress and
well-being. He never spared their
feelings when it was 'necessary to
correct their faults, and they had
that high regard for him that one has
for the surgeon who has rendered
him great service at the cost of some
temporary pain.
"The passing of Professor Fogg
Tucker-Shean
1123 "(T ST
GIFTS
FOR THE
GRADUATE
Jewelry
Cut Class
Silver Plate
Watches
Clocks
Leather Goods
Fountain Pen Sets
Fine Stationery
Plan Your Gifts Now
Sim Our Wiadew
Tucker-Shean
Jewelers Si at loners
1123 XT Si.
COLLEGES DIFFER
OH PROHIBITION
Eastern Schools Favor Modification,
Western Universities Desire
No Chang In Law
NEW YORK, (By New Student
Service) College students of the
East favor modification while under
graduates of the middle and west are
for maintaining the eighteenth
amendment intact. This generalisa
tion holds true in the returns so far
reported by the National Student
Federation referendum. Cornell and
Yale are strongly for modification,
Connecticut Wcsleyan went "dry" by
a slim majority, and now Williams
reports 200 for modification, 99
against. Ileidleberg College favor
ed prohibition by a vote of 219 to 81.
Indications of a huge vot to be
piled up for prohibition are in evi
dence. At Kansas Wcsleyan college
the student body voted to send a tel
egram to the senate stating that the
college was for prohibition. The
vote was taken after a chapel lecture
by the state superintendent of the
anti-saloon league.
Parade at Atlanta
In Georgia a methodist pastor told
an assembly of Emory University stu
dents of a monstrous parade to be
held in Atlanta to "biff John Barley
corn." He explained that it will be
youth's protest against the propa
ganda the wets are creating about
the young people of America becom
ing boozers and "going to the devil.'
Wiiliard Hay, newly-lected presi
dent of the Liberal Arts Council, is
heading the campaign at Emory. He
is confident that Emory will do her
part in showing the anarchists of
America this false presumption on
their part. It is probable that the
Emory band will also lend its stirring
strains to the occasion.
Pictures of this magnificent pa
rade will be filmed for the movies
and for the rotogravure sections of
newspapers all over the country. It
will be an epoch-making incident in
the life of Atlanta's youth and in the
enforcement of the prohibition move
ment. It will show that students and
young people are in favor of "en
forcement of the law instead of
weakening it." And it is only fitting
that Emory should head the pro-
saddens us. Others will take tap the
work that he laid aside, but personal
ity is never replaced. His memory
will ever remain with the university
and his influence extend to those who
have never seen his face."
Active pallbearers were Guy Cham
bers, Clifford Rein, Earl Cline, Paul
Good, James Lawrence and Anan
Raymond.
ALSO
Dorothy Phillip
la Aw tsw-ttrnj AUIvtialur
The Bar-C Myttery
LEEMORAN
la thr Laura Prevokinr draarff
"THE SALUTE"
lFillHliM(AlLl l TTTITI
- - - : !oEC3aara3E235iT' B IJ
MON. TUES. WED. I 5 J0
THIS WEEK
THREE DAYS ONLY I
A Thrillin Story 4 Lew. Hate and . , . , B , Kjr
Justice in the Cattle Country A Delktful and tkrillmf cewdy a i. sffiT-
mm awStaw- drama superbly directed and artifcti-
PETERB fffiifp
KYNE'S JiBss'Sffl
1 V
i :
Crm CHara a Anna Strrart
rox mws vtrKiy
COMING
THU1L i JU SAT.
"Fighting Youth"
A 7 we Ftatee Prmma wrrk
Wm. fan-banks Pauline Caaroa
"The Radio
Detective"
Atifl O'lit-r Cntertainm farteres
SHOWS AT -1, 1. S. e.
MAT. 20i KSTZ 2&c CKO. I Oc
Full Program
For Round-up
(Continued from Tnge One)
the near future. Chancellor Samuel
Avery will give his annual report at
this time, instead of at the general
meeting on Saturday.
More interest than usual is being
taken in the interfraternity baseball
contest this year. The finals in the
elimination contest will be played in
the stadium at 10 o'clock Friday and
skins will be awarded to tho winner
and runner-up.
Law Barbecue
The annual law barbecue for stu
dents, faculty, and graduates of the
College of Law will be the usual fes
tive affair at the Lincoln Automobile
Club Tark Friday, beginning at 11:30
o'clock. Baseball and other enter
tainment will provide amusement af
ter the anticipated "feed."
Friday afternoon will be given
over mostly to the thirty-fourth an
nual competitive drill of cadet. A
competitive drill between the six best
platoons will be a new feature of the
day and according to custom the regi
ment will be reviewed by the honor
ary colonel, Miss Frances McChesney,
and the co-ed sponsors. i
The final individual events of
"compet" will take place in the eve
ning as part of the carnival at the ;
coliseum. f
The Lincoln Tan-Hellenic Associa-i
tion will entertain informally at tea
from 4 until 5 6'clock in Ellen Smith
Hall for all sorority alumnae.
Memorial Service for Lees
The memorial service for the late
Dr. James T. Lees, which was ori
ginally planned for Wednesday at 1 1 J
o'clock, has been changed to 5 j
o'clock on Friday. This will enable
Tie mem ktaueroms best-
Fifth
Edition
f2V
"One of the most dis
tinctive and premising
contributions to Amer
ican humor cf recent
years. Tlie illustra
tions... are altogether
delightful."
Hew York
LIS'! limes
87 -1
by Milt Gross
cunor Fair
n Julia Fiyc
w r
i r 'I M-mu4d;
Captrvatinf Entartainmfft
"RAH, RAH,
HEIDELBERG"
A New Vaa BiUxr Camedy
Wild Asnaricaa ?iiin1asna "ieaalii
ed War-Id's Ke-a-s Carta's Oddities,
A Scraea Kevelty
ON THE STAGE
Three Chaminc Dauraters W a
Minister
The Abbey Sisters
Ha
ey Vecalicta
Hps
Bahich and the Orchestra
Mrs. May M. Mills. Orraniet
SHOWS AT 1, , S. 7, .
MATS SSc KITE 4ftc CHO. lOc
out-of-town alumni and former
friends of Dr. Lees to attend. There
will be a brief group of addresses
and musical numbers in Grant Mem
orial Hall followed by the dedication
of the oak tree planted nenr Univer
sity Hall in memory of Dr. Lees.
His ashes will bo buried beneath its
branches. Dr. R . II. Wolcott is
chairman of the committee in charge.
The climax of gayety for the
Koumi-up will come on Friday eve
ning at 7:30 o'clock, when Alumni
and students will join in the "final
frolic or Carnival of Fun at the
new Field House.
Saturday morning Alumni Dayj
the program will start with the'
lass breakfasts at 9 o'clock for the!
special reunion classes. Mr. and '
M rs. Charles Roberts are inviting the !
members of the honor class, 190(3,
to have breakfast with them at the
University Club. Th? class of 19is!
will also meet at the club for a '
breakfast and election of officers. j
The class of 1900 will gather at
Le Petit Gourmet for breakfast fori
which arrangements are being made
SM
V RICARDO CORTEZ 1 1 1
GRETA GARBO tfj "?7- J I
enj this big cast 'ly WZZ . -:r I
Gntrade Oinnaed Jt" I t I
Ard-r E. Care. fX f, fk- ,
1 fi '" Nana CjXn . V pSJ! i.jfiss? I
You'll be swept away by the drama and the heartthrobs
in this colorful film of a woman who sacrificed all for
love,
Br t! Mm WU Gave Yon tbe Tsar Havur
CLYDE COOK in
"What's the World Coaxiar Ta."
ALL
THIS
WEEK
RIALTO
Skew At 1, 3. S, 7. 9.
Big Round Up
'J'HE public halls this as one of the great
est romance-thrill pictures ever shown!
Made from the tremendorialy popular stage
play, with an AU-Star cast of players, and
vilh actual scenes from big games here is
perfect entertainment for lovers f romance
and action!
The Football Epic yon tune been walling
for! The College romance you'll aJorel
SEE THE GREAT
SCENES OF
ACTUAL
BIG COLLEGE
GAMES!
JACK PICKFOED, MARY
BRIAN, MARY ALDEN,
FRANCIS X. BUSHMAN, JR.
V7ILLIAM HAINES
trnTamMrm)
by the president, Fred C. Williams
of Lincoln.
"Avenue of Years"
The coliseum will be open at 11
o'clock for the general reunion along
the "avenue of years" where each
class may group its own members. A
parade of students with their par
ents who were also formerly Univer
sity of Nebraska students will be an
innovation this year at the noon
hour. A silver loving cup will be
given to the "old grad" father or
mother who has the most children in
University now, provided they all
march in tho parade. Robert F.
Craig, 24, is lining up the second I
generation students for this new fea-
ture.
Two performances will be given by
the University Flayers of one of their
best productions at the Temple
Theater. These will In? given at 3
o'clock and 8:15. These showings
are for all alumni. Saturday evening
many more organization banquets
are being planned.
Registration headquarters during
the Round-up will be maintained at
j KINOGRAMS
! TOPICS OF THE DAY
ALL
THIS
WEEK
- CbiL lOc
Mat 25c Nite 35c
j
Week Program
This
Week
Prosrara !
of
TV ill
CA
It n
f 1
iff A II
M) V '
the Alumni office on the first floor
of the Temple. Each alumnus will be
supplied there with tickets for the
various home-coming events.
WE ANNOUNCE ADDITION of I
new Chrysler Sedans to our lint
of rental cars. Rates reasonable,
special price on long trips. New
Fords for rent as always. We wDl
continue to give reliable service,
night or day. Motor Out Company,
1120 P Street. BCS19. 140
o .ict.ON or L.M. CARMAN
ALL. THIS WEEK
i
She hated him
She feared him
Yet Could not
resist him ! !
His voice his music
enslaved her. She feared
him she hated him
yet could not resist him
when he called. Her love
for Raoul was as nothing
when Erik wanted her.
t
k.5 I.'
4
Why did they call him the
Phantom? What was his
unearthly power? Who
was he? Why did thous
ands seek him out in that
last mad hunt in the un
derground? To under
stand to enjoy to
thrill you and your
whole family must see the
most fantastic melodrama
ever made. Come now!
FOCR SHOWS DAILY
I TOO - 3 OO . 7:00 . 9:00 P. M
Adults 25c ChiL lOc
in: - irii w ' Bi u it n
JNC0LN
THEATRE wcck
E-0 North 14th St- "it, or L 829S
evenings.
- Sl. t. S. s, 7.
Mat. S5c Niia iOc CU lot