TWO FRIDAY, JULY 17, 1931. The Nebraskan Station A. Lincoln, Nebraska OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY Ur INtBH9 ""Published Tuesday and Friday morn ings during summer school. Entered ait second class matter at the postoffica in Lincoln, Nebraska, under act of congress, March 3, 1879, and at special rate of postage provided for in Section 1103, act of October 3. 1917. authorized January 20, 1922. Directed by the Student Publication board. SUBSCRIPTION "BATE For Nine Weeks 60 cents mailed 25 cents on campus Single copy 5 cents. 6scarNorling Executive Editor Jack Erickson Editorial Assistant Bernard -Jennings. Business Assistant A Student Body. pOR 1,209 students, classes in the six weeks session are held for the last time today. For 754, school we rk for the summer is over. Six weeks is such a brief period that it allows little time for be coming acquainted with faculty members, students and the Univer sity of Nebraska. Yet more has been accomplished along that line this season than in past years. A common opinion among those who have attended past summer sessions at the university has been that summer attendance did not really entitle them to "belong" to the student body of the university. There were no organizations, no organized activities, no general social functions, little opportunity for them to meet students other than those with whom they were associated in the classrooms. Much has been done this sum mer to dispel this notion. The selection cf a student executive committee has enabled students to plan parties and picnics when and as they wish. With the co-operation of the dramatic department a three-act comedy was given, pro viding summer rtudents with as excellent an entertainment as any staged during the winter term. The Summer Nebraskan, in its second year cf existence, has attempted to keep studerts informed as to all summer activities. As to educa tional advantages, the securing of a group cf visiting professors rec ognized as leaders in their respec tive fields in addition to a good rejection from the regular faculty presents opportunities for study which are second to no other term during the year. What has been attempted this summer will be continued next year. Kach year finds many teach ers who return to find their circle of acquaintanceships a little larger and their appreciation of the summer session a little greater. And they discover that they are as much a part of the student body as those who attend during the win ter. For time is not the decisive ele ment in determining who shall be members of a university student body. Some attend a single sum mer session and catch a glimpse of the ideals of the school and the individual effort necessary to bring the realization of such aspirations. Others spend months and even years grabbing what is being of fered by the state without a thought as to individual responsi bility. STUDENT OPINION To the Editor: 1 hear many complaints from frienda and acquaintances in sum mer school to the effect that Eng lish is a painful subject to study or teach. If English is a subject painful alike to study and to teach, this is because the language now is, and always has been, mi.1--lt pi evented in school textbooks. A taught the ubject imparts not the least implication that English is r. high specialized, individualized and simplified language the most atlartab)e and the mosts logically constructed of all. Compared to it, 1 be'licve that Latin and Greek are almost barbarous tongues. The l-auty e)f English lies hidden un der a dead weight of terms which have no meaning and rules and definitions taken frem Greek and Latin grammar. English should be freed from these foreign entangle ments if our students are to ever pet any understanding of their own language. A. S. E. FORDYCE PLANS TRIP. . Following the finish of the cur rent session of summer school Dr. Charles Fordyce, chairman of the department of educational measurement and psychology end measurements, will go to the Union Summer sebcool at Estes Vark, O)o., where he will give a reries of le-ctures on vocational guidance. ON THE CAMPUS Three students from Lodgepole are attending the summer session. They are Frieda Louise Michelman, Lillie Marie Michelman and Merrill H. Ziegler. The two women are sophomores in Teachers college and both will teach in Lodgepole during the coming year. Mrs. Ziegler is taking graduate work. Ella Louise Baack and Bruce Frederick Hagemeister are form Potter. Miss Baack, a freshman in Teachers college, will teach in Pot ter. Mr. Hagemeister, also in Teachers college, will teach at Wahoo. Of the ten students from Cheyen ne county this summer, five are from Sidney. Mable Foster, a junior in the college of agriculture, will teach at Bronson. Ethel Lyng holm is a senior in Teachers col lege and Elma Nelson is a junior in the college of arts and sciences. Gene Liebendorfer is taking gradu aet work and James Rosse is a senior majoring in agriculture. Mr. Roose will teach in Sidney. , Delia Marvine Dunbar, a junior in Teachers college, is the only student from Imperial this sum mer. Three of the four students from Chase coOnty are from Wauneta. They are Elva Anna Johnson, Ai DeLoss McCallum and Norris Alvin Nesmith. Miss Johnston will re turn to her home town to teach this year. Four students from Greenwood are attending the summer session. Verna Jardine Bates, a freshman in Teachers college, will teach at Mcintosh, S. D. Mamie Eleanora Maber, also in Teachers college, is a sophomore. Frieda Weitzel is taking graduate work. Hayden De Ford Hughes is also in the gradu ate college. Elmwood is represented by four students at summer school. Francis Marian Dorr, who is taking gradu ate work, will be teaching at Bertrand. Rosemary Gertude John, a senior in Teachers college, will be at Walthill. Lois Elizabeth Lean is a junior in Teachers college. Bion A. Hoffman will teach at Elmwood. Esther A. Hartman and Theo dore H. Hartmen are from Louis ville. Miss Hartmen is taking work in Teachers college while Mr. Hatr men is a senior in the college of arts and sciences. From Nehawka are listed Velma Janne Munn and Walter Carl Door. Mr. Door, who will teach at Ne hawka, is taking graduate work. Three students form Eagle are at the university. Esther Marie Wenzel is a senior at the agricul tural college. Richard Manion Kildee, a graduate student, will re turn to teach at Eagle. Harold Laverne Siekman is also a gradu ate student. From Weeping Water are listed Bernice Belle Burch, Wilma Ruth Burch, Florence Mildred Jewell and William Lester Aarmstrong. Ber nice Burch will teach at Sargent this year and Wilma Burch will be at Lyons. Mr. Armstrong will return to teach at Weeping Water. The five students from Murdock are Hildeerarde A. Baumcrartner. a graduate student who iwil teach at Ashland; Cecile Newkirk Lee, a senior in arts and sciences; Ele eanor Margaret Stroy, junior in Teachers college and a teacher at Bingham; Carl John Baugartner junior in the college of medicine at Omaha, and Tercy Theodore Johnson, graduate stueient. Margaret Grace Carver. Willene Elizabeth Fager. Billy Merle Car ver and Leonard Leroy Larson are form Avoca. Margaret Carver and Leonard Larson will teach at Avoca. Alma Rosina Althouse, junior in Teachers college, and Gertrude Christenson, sophomore in arts and sciences, are form Alvo. Miss Althouse will teach in Lancaster county. Alfred Theordore Snedgen, also if Alvo where he will teach this year, is taking graduate work. Of the thirty-nine students from Cass count', six are form Platt smoutb. They are Hazel Lois Dovey, senior in Teachers college; Sodas Sundaes LUNCHES Sirdwiches Salads Rector's Pharmacy C. E. Buchhclr, Mgr. 13 i P DRUG STORE NEEDS Bancroft School Inaugurates Speech Clinic to Correct Twists, of Tongue "1 am most delighted with the results obtained in our clinics," stated Miss Maude Rousseau, prin cipal of Bancroft school this sum mer, in speaking of the reading and speech correction clinics con ducted there during the summer session. In each of these laboratories the particular difficulty of the child is discovered and diagnosed; then a remedy is advised und applied. Miss Bessie Rasmus, instructor of speech pathology at Iowa uni versity, is in charge of the speech correction clinic. The first hour her university students actually meet and work with the children who have speech defects. The sec ond hour is given over to theory, method, and practical questions. "After the sound has been taught as a single sound, the train ing is individual, "explained Miss Rasmus. "Drills are so worked out Isabel Rainey, freshman in Teachers college who will teach at Sprinfteld; Joe Edward Hartford, sophomore in engineering college; Elmer Edward Johnosn, junior in Teachers college; Gerald A. Kvas nicka, graduate college, and Robert Foster Patterson, also of the graduate college who will teach at Platlsmouth. Four of the fourteen students form Cedar county are form Hart ington. Ethel Bryant, who will teach in Lincoln, has been taking graduate work. Louise Joan Haber man, a junior in Teachers college, will be at Wynot. Emma Lou Hunter, who yill teach at Coleridge is a freshman in Teachers college. Delos Wintrop Orcutt is a senior in the college of agriculture. Berince D. Dunlavy, Lulu L. Waite and Harley N. Rohdes are from Laurel. Bernice Dunlavy, who will teach at Laurel, has been taking graduate work. Lulu wane is a freshman in arts and sciences. Harley Rhodes, a graduate student, will return to teacn ai laurei. Coleridee is represented by three students at summer session. They are Margaret weoer, senior in Teachers college; James Harold Lowther, who will teach at Lex ington, Mo., and who is taking graduate work, and Elmer Mundt Weber, another graduate who will teach at Coleridge. Coin John Beuck is the only student form Belden at the sum mer session. He is a junior in arta and sciences college and wiL1 teach at Julesburg Colo. LeRov Allison. Henrv Andrew Engel and Harold Hirst Hartman are form Randolhp. Mr. i,ngel win teach at Red Cloud. Ruth Ruby Barden, Agnes Frances Kirwan and Olga Eliza beth Wondra are form Spencer. All three are taking work in Teachers college. Miss Kirwan will teach at Spencer during tee coming year. George U. Sanner from Bristow is taking special work in Teachers college. Ralph W. Hill, who will teach at Lynch, and Erma Fay Schies sler, freshman in Teachers college are from Lynch. Two of the nine students form Boyd county are form Butte. They are Helen Catherine Brennan, senior in arts and sciences, and Eula Van Vranken Wilson, who is taking graduate work and will teach in Butte during the coming year. Of the tne students form Brown county, seven are form Ainsworth. Elmer E. Holm of Ainsworth. who is taking graduate work and will return to his home town to teach this winter, is the only man regist ered from the county. Dorothy G. Browne is a junior in arts and sciences college. Lila Elizabeth Mc Andrew, senior; Alice W. Morrow, ; EAT COOL and : : KEEP cool : Special Summer Lunches Fountain Service - Bock's Coffee Shop Facing Campus as to meet the life situation of the child in order that the correct sound will carry over into the chilel's spontaneous speech." There are fifteen student teach ers each with two assistants tak ing the course in remedial reading and working in the clinic under the supervision of Miss Mildred M. Miller, elementary supervisior, Cleveland Heightj, O. The instructor smiled as she ex plained that t'Js arrangement was necessary since they had more teachers than children. "We have ninety-two enrolled and had not anticipated that the course would be so popular." Each teacher works with an in dividual child. After many diag nostic measures have been ap plied, corrective work is begun. Miss Miller also teaches a course in social studies and one in curriculum essentials in primary grades. sophomore, and Martha Rose Mor row, freshman, are taking work in Teachers college. All four will teach in Ainsworth this year. Lyda Martha Rogers, a freshman in Teachers college, will be at Mitchell. Virginia Ann Shrimpton is a senior in the school of fine arts. Audrey Marie Cameron and Wilma Gladys Griffith are form Johnston. Audrey Cameron is a sophomore in Teachers college and Wilma Griffith, a freshman in the Brown county. Helen Alvina Flyr is the only student from Lone Pine. She is taking first year work in Teachers college and will teach in Johnston. Of the nineteen students form Buffalo county, only three are from Kearney are taking work at the vniversity this summer. Gladys Shadduck Haskins, who will teach in Buffalo county this year, is tak ing third year work in Teachers college. Allen Griffith Anderson and Carl Lorenzo Cox, who will teach in Quinten, Kas., are in the graduate college. Jo Oliver, Barbara Bassett Prouty, Helen Lucia Prouty, Alice Naomi Roberts and Floyd R. Schroeder. Lotta Jo Oliver is tak ing graduate work. Barbara Prouty, freshman, and Helen Prouty, junior, are enrolled in Teachers college. Alice Roberts is a senior in the college of agricul ture and Floyd Schroeder is in the graduate college. Edna Mae Link, a senior in Teachers college, will return to her home twon at St. Michael to teach another student form St. Michael, is a senior in arts and sciences college. July sale of ' 1 I T DANCING KEEPS 1 YOU YOUNG I LEARN TO I DANCE I Special Kates in 1 5a 11 room Dancing I Borner Sisters I Studio 1 1536 "P" St. B4819 i j "TV M Summer Footwear $2 pr. '-in tun Specialty Shor Shop A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF PUMPS Willi ; licjuc; S( aS.UK 1 ; " t Mack aul wliilc; iiii-f smart is. Mi(,'li ami low !jIs. tractively styled! Coo.l fii lintr! OriginaJly 4 00 pr. Siz-s L" j 1o ui.lllm ,,. 7 THE LIBRARY "Summer students are older than those of former sessions, and the men out number the -women," remarked Miss Craig, reference li brarian. "This can be accounted for by the fact that a greater number than usual are working toward the higher degrees. Since the summer students are more mature, they re quire less help in their reference work." Mr. Doane, librarian, will leave Saturday, July 18, to join Mrs. Doane who is now in Newport, R. I. Later they will go to Ver mont, where they will spend some time. Miss Gertrude Robson, head cat aloger of the library, is now en joying a vacation in New England.. Mrs. Consuello S. Graham, as sistant reference librarian, is tak ing a month's vacation. She will remain in the city. The 1930 census volumes are ar riving at the library and are avail able for use. Very few summer students take advantage of the Sunday hours at the library. This is probably due to the fact that many take advantage of the fine weather conditions, and drive home for the week end. House's Waffle House 1127 R Street HOME COOKED MEALS KPERCOLATED COFFEE A P TASTY SANDWICHES Q DELICIOUS WAFFLES Open 6 A. M. to 12 P. M. While You Are Here Oct yourself in ship shape for the next school year YOUR WATCH Should be cleaned and serviced by our expert watch makers. YOUR RINGS Should be cleaned and reset or restored. YOUR EYES Should be rctested and glasses fitted by our graduate opticians. YOUR SUPPLIES Of writing instruments and materials should be replenished at Tucker-Shean Jeweler Opticians Stationer 1123 "0" St. WO tOP' col At A ami . -Third Floor. 7 Iff