11 IK - NF.IIKASKAN, TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1930. TIIHEE MJIOONKU SOON to in: placed ON NEWS STANDS lr. Lowry C. Wlmbjrly. etlitor . ihe rriUrle Schooner, Ne bnu.li literary quarterly, an nounces the publication of the summer Uue, which will be re leased to newsstands next week. Amonc outstandlnir features of this Iwue are: Wild Jasmine, a nry by Mildred Tlew Merryman cf Florida: Work, a poem by Moe Hran of Broklln. New York; Tree of Life." a story by Eleanor Baltzman of" the University of Iowa;"The MidlandUh Mind." an article by Kugcne Konecky of Om ahwa. STUDENT PULSE To the Editor of The Nebraakan: Does It not seem too bad that the University of Nebraska har bors some of the deadest things on earth (I hope you will allow me to use the superlative here)? Now I do not mean some of the things about which you have been I rinting- articles this summer, but refer to dead clocks. I think about the most depressing thing I know is a clock that refuses to tell time. For years the university has had some of these on its walls. This has a bad effect on persons coming Into the classrooms for AlwavV fa IOgrs A Mr laaaiM ht I "1 waH grt 1 aaram he aaldal aaay wHh rairar! It' Claudette Colbert AND Fredric March STAGE THE WORLD'S SENSATION "THE UESEMS" DALTON and CRAIG la "THIS AND: THAI" T Crate af the Hmi la the rrail ret vort af fan m 4 faelUlums that' er 4. II (Med ra! Jack Oakie In a frlkliy. frhra loin apniar I a a e comply. 'Let's Go tlative!' With hkri-U fiallahr Jranrtte MaIHm.ld Kuceno ruk-Ke LADIES ALL WEEK Frr ttraoty Drmonslratlon and llralth Lectare nil be hriij on the Mrxznalnr floor at Ibe con rluclou of every show HARGAIN HOI R It TO I Me MON, TIES'- WED. r imi V 1 Uil V - . ' , IT'S Kt'NNJ AND EXCITING Dorothy PJ3aclta.il r N- "Strictly Modem" rctlt.-.tion and fives a tad Iniorrs won to vihitors punaing through. If the university cannot afford t hAV tlltlil rf.ftnMi IjuI uIIW k. electric current, let the authorities order the Janitors to take them down and get them out of sight. While I am airing this grouch I should like to appeal for better Janitor service in the university. I refer to the diluting of the fur niture In the class rooms. Why not have the superintendent of build ings order the Janitors to dust each momlnir? Till U'nill.l rw.t lnriiF much extra expense and would Im prove tnings tremendously. When students enter the lihrarv to study they must use handker chiefs, scraps or paper, or anything tney can nnii 10 wipe inc tnisi on the tables so that it Is safe to study there. There Is small incen tive to students to put on fresh clothinir each moraine and then spend the first hour at a table or desk that looks as thought it had not been dusted for a week. It seems that the university will employ faculty members of culture and refinement, trained in the best schools of the country and then al low them to teach at desks that are laden with dust. It is repul sive to the teachers and to the stu dents as well. No matter how fastidious a teacher Is he gets duKt on his sleeves and clothinir and the students notice and won der woat is the matter with the university system of housekeeping. I have such high regard for the work offered by the University of Nebraska that for five summers I have paid a non-residence fee in order to attend here, and have usedd roy influence to get others to do the same. But these small evidences of laxity-cause the ap pearance of the university 10 oe lss enticlnz to students than It deserves.' - You can't sell sugar In the back part or a store u inc show windows are full of flies. Yours In summer heat, XYZ. FOUIMI CLUBMEN HAVE CHANCE AT PICTURE TAKING "Four-H Club Pictures and How to Get Them" is the title of the latest of the news-writing cir culars being prepared this sum mer by Elton Lux of the Univer sity of Nebraska extension serv ice, for the 4-H club news report ers and local leaders of Ne torftsli&o Two trips to the 1931 clu - week at Lincoln have been offered by photo finishers and photoraphers, and one picture is required of each news reporter qualifying in cer tain contests for other trips to the club week. MUD BALL TURNS INTO VALUABLE MUSEUM EXHIBIT The largest septearium in the museum 'was recently secured by Prof. E. H. Barbour from Rev. G. L. Shull, Verdon, Neb. A septearium is a mineral con cretion formed in a peculiar man ner. It was originally a ball of mud which hardened and cracked in the sun. These cracks then filled with mineral matter and when the mud washed out, it left a beautiful honeycomb of mineral deposit. MICKEY SELECTED FOB WATER PROJECT Prof. Clark E. Mickey, chairman of the department of civil engi neering, has been appointed by Gov. A. J. Weaver to complete the compilation of data and prepare a report on the water resources of the state so that a plan for the development of such resources may be recommended to the next state legislature. Lost-In Bessy Hall, a gcU ...o.vi Vrrfx nlcase call wnai ui.cn. i Agnes Ullman, Reward. B6257 or L8748. PICKWHCERS WE HAVE WHAT YOU WANT! The Original and Old Reliable Delicatessen Provides You with , DUTCH LUNCHES , , , . :!'? U r 'FRESH WEINERS ! ' ' HIGHEST GRADE CANNED GOODS : FINEST PASTRIES "Real Summer Treats" THE MILWAUKEE DELICATESSEN nosim; roii news Witn Gtorge Dunn. TlIK SrF.KCII department of the - 1 l.li,... - m , i uuivrieujr 'i iuwh una aum- nier la ponortng the production of the Shakexpercan fantasy "A Midsummer Night's Dream'' and one of the Sean O'Caaey'a do mestic tragedies. The actors In the cast. A scenic artint from the Uni versity of California Is In charge of the productions. VI ME ERNESTINE achumann iYIHelnk, who celebrated her sixty-ninth birthday recently, has been engaged by one of the larger vaudeville circuits to sing four performances a day for several weeks. In Retrospection The more you study The more you know The more you know Tho more you forget So why study ? The less you study The less you know The less you know The less you forget: . The less you forget The more you know So why study? IOWA STATE collere at Ames announced recently that a total of 5.678 different students were in residence there during the past year. This number also includes thA enrollment for the summer sessions last summer. It is slightly more than a hundred greater than the enrollment of the previous Adding short course students to those students who were enrolled for one quarter or more, the total for the year was 10,045. THE FORMAL presentation of 1 thememorial statue of Dr. William Oxley Thompson, presi dent emeritus of Ohio State uni versity, bv classes 1923. 1925. j 1926 and 1928 was recently made at ColomDus, o. Dr. Thompson was in Lincoln Invites the teachers to provide themselves with necessary items of school and person al equipment before returning to their po sitions. School Room Equipment Students Supplies Personal Stationery Jewelry Watch Repairing Leather Goods Glasses Fitted Tucker-Shean JEWELERS OPTICIANS STATIONERS "O" Street Sheaf. 1123 last winter. In charee of a num ber of meetings held at the First . . a a a rrcMbylenan cnurcn, tevenirrnm and F streets. lie spofc ,!K l tinivemttv convocation. CTUDENTS IN sixty-two courses J at IK TTnlueraltu nt Wlafonaln foufht a llnx last June when they took final examinations on Friday the thirteenth, sucn courses as Knrllah. art hlstorv. reorraphy. political science, psychology, Ital ian, speecn. tooiogy, ucpanincmu teacners courses ana agricultural enclneerlne were listed for the hoodoo day. Counting trie average or ininy students In each class, approx imately 1.800 took Jinx finals. '-THE Silver Cord'' wa an 1 nounced as the play to be pro duced sometime during the six weeks summer session at the Unl vemitv of Kansas bv the Fraser players. Plans have been made to produce a series or six piays uur Inc the session but due to the fact ning trips abroad and others will not be In school makes imponsiDie the cahtlne of more than one piy- "THE MEMBERS of the Michigan 1 State colleee chapter of PI Kappa Delta, national debating honorary, and the business men of Lansinir have extended an in vitation to the society to bold Its biennial convention In Lansing In the spring- of 1932. The conven tion this vear was held the lest of March and the first of April In Wichita, Kas., six nunarea stu dents, consistine of debaters, orators and public speakers are expected at tne meeting in io. AND THEN we'll take the air- plane and go home." No not a sen In the future Now that it is almost over and you are going home Don't forget our MAIL SERVICE is glad to follow vou wherever you eo. and fill your needs promptly. mm ummer j MmjjBsilr-.r-J J i uUJMirjMW NEED FREQUENT GLEANING! HAVE US KEEP YOUR GARMENTS CLEANED AND PRESSED IN FIRST CLASS SHAPE FOR ALL OC CASIONS. Our service is prompt and reliable. Our prices aro reasonable. W call tor andrdeliyer to all, parts of fche city. M odern when airplanes are as common as street cars, but merely a couple f coeds making their plans for returning home on tne naiuruay after school was out at the Unl versity of Washington. DESK LIBRARIAN LEAVES POSITION Th reaiirnatlon of Miss Mar gartt Holland, reserve desk libra rian at the main imrary, wromrs .rr.ttu cent. l. Miss Holland. who has served the needs f the students at the reserve ciesK xor three years, has accepted a kin dergarten instruction p"u" Preston, la. leANGUAGE PROF NOW IN SPAIN nr .1 R. A. Alexis, professor of romance languages at the univer sity, who has been aoing rrnennn work m France this summer, left last week for Spain to spend the remaining part of the summer, ac cording to word reclved here. OUR SERVICE MADE OUR BUSINESS Will eeur tlifclory potlttoni for all Degrea Teacher: alto lor II thott with two or thr ytara Cf University work. Try ua. ACTIVE AND DEPENDABLE th nine yeaH pfticlng Teachers Nebraska School Service . AMD Teachers1 Exchange W. K. A. Anl. n. te.. A. M. Maaarer (. M.. I alvrralty af Nrtrakn) Rmmim 101-S Haar Hulllln Linenlt, braka Address Personal Shopping Service Our service pleases! Garments Gleaners IB SOUKUP & WESTOVER, MGRS. "26th Year In Lincoln" 21 & G Phone F2377 Open Till Mionite and Sunday B5192. IMA " Free Delivery