A Saturday, August 1, 1942 SUMMER RAG. Co-ed Counselors Will Help Frosh Women Get Set at JJN All freshmen women will be f IJ? under the supervision of Co-ed Counselors for the first six weeks of school this fall, the Associated Women Students has decided. In past years all organizations made plan for the freshmen women as soon as school started, giving them no time to become acquainted on the campus or to learn the traditions of the univer sity. ,The job of orienting: all fresh- il men women has been turned over to this group of about 150 women. Members of Co-ed Counselors are chosen by the Co-ed Counselor board from the group of appli cants on their interest in other students and desire to help fresh- 41 men. Registration Guides. Each woman' entering the uni versity for the first time will be assigned to a Co-ed Couselor who will meet her and talk with her as soon as registration Is com pleted. During registration Co-ed Coun selors take the new students thru the coliseum and to their assign ment committee and give general information. After the first six weeks the counselors keep a room in Ellen Smith hall where women may stop and rest or talk with others. This room has just been furnished and decorated by the organization. Mother-Daughter Banquet. Each spring the organization sponsors a Mother-Daughter ban quet where the counselors eat with the freshmen women they have ad vised during the first six week3 and worked with thru the year. This banquet has become a tradi tion on the campus and last year set the attendance record with about 300 women present. Coed Counselor officers are Anne Kinder, president; Dorothy Weirich, vice president; and Phyl lis Holebrook, secretary-treasurer. Lots of Room For Aspiring ANcws Hounds Five thousand people make a lot of news. Chemistry professors write books. Beautiful girls en- tertain the boys from home. Zo ologists keep raccoons for pests. Deans issue warnings about the ganger of liquor. Colonels install complicated military systems. Proclamations are issued about in- . formal military balls. In short, 5,000 people on the Nebraska campus means a news paper, a daily newspaper with spot news, features, fashions, editorials a campus newspaper put out by students for student benefit. Complimenting the DAILY NE BRASKAN is the year book, the CORNHUSKER, put out each year under student control. The year book is a permanent record of the more pertinent happenings and events on the campus during the year. The route to success on these 4 n More Time left for Rush Parties )uriii those busy days packcl with rush week na tivity it's fast ami ci'l' icietit Hervin tliat counts. Take ! van la ire of this type of .service at. Lincoln's newest lunl most conveniently lo ( led liolel to the campus Air conditioned Guesi Rooms Coffee Lounge and Huddle HOTEL CAPITAL may move in anytime after receiv ing their invitation. Sororities have been limited in their expenditures because of the war and groups will have to use their ingenuity in planning all rush parties. There will be no flowers at any of the parties, and no favors will be given to the rushees. Panhellenic rules as set up for this fall include among other hold over rules the stipulation that all rushees must attend the rush meeting prior to the first open house and once a rushee has started attending the open houses she must complete the series. Write Mrs. Schmelkin. Any questions which a rushee has should be sent to Mrs. Ruth Schmelkin, Panhellenic office. Mrs. Schmelkin is the chairman of the advisory board. During the summer each rushee will receive information from the Panhellenic office including the completed rushing plans and rules. Sororities on the NU campus: Alpha Chi Omega Ksppa Alpha Theta Alpha Omicron PI Kappa Delta Alpha Phi Kappa Kappa Alpha XI Delta Camma Chi Omega Phi Mil Delta Delta Delta Pi Beta Phi Delta Gamma Sigma Delta Tail (iamma Phi Beta Sigma Kippa publications is a comparatively simple one -but is definitely straight and narrow. For instance, if you want to be editor of the Cornhusker, do some work while you are a freshman, secure a staff position when a sophomore, get a managing editorship in your third year, and then move into the edi torship your last year. If you want to be editor of the NEBRASKAN, start as a reporter while a freshman, get a news edi torship as a sophomore or junior, move up to managing editor when you are a junior or senior, and get the editorship in your fourth year. Ability Essential. This is simple but here is where the straight and narrow comes in. Ability in newspaper lines is es sential to the beginning cub re porter but more importance is per sistence and that quality which, in polite society, is commonly called "nerve." But it all means gold in some body's hills. Almost $500 is paid out each month to members of the two staffs. Approximately 25 stu dents share in the money. The NEBRASKAN payroll in cludes the following: Editor and business manager, $40; two man aging editors, $30; five news edi tors and two assistant business managers. $20; sports editor, $15; circulation manager, $25; assist ant circulation manager, $15; a bookkeeper, $12.50; and a secre tary, $5. The CORNHUSKER payroll: Editor and business manager, $30; photographer, $10; three assistant business managers, $5; two man aging editors, $7.50. Bonuses in cluded are for business manager and editor, $230; assistant busi ness managers and managing edi tors, $50. Rush Week . . . (Continued from Page 1.) made by writing to the Panhel office. If the rushee resides in Lin coln, she must register with Pan hel during the summer, also. All registrations must lie accompanied by the $2.50 rushing fee. Rush week activities will begin Sunday morning when late regis tration will be completed at the Panhellenic office. This will bo followed by two periods of open house. During these periods each rushee will have an opportunity to visit every sorority house on the campus. Chancellor to Speak. Sunday evening there will be a general meeting for all rushees at the Student Union. Chancellor Boucher will speak at this time and welcome the rushees to the university. Parties begin on Monday with a brunch from 10 to 12:30. Tea will be served In the afternoon at the parties from 3 until 5 and the evening party will begin at 8 and last until 10:30. Tuesday's parties include cof fee, 9 to 11 a. m.; a sandwich spread, 1 to 3:30 p. m.; and the evening party, 7 to 9. Each rushee will file her preference in the Panhel office following the party. Preference Luncheon. Wednesday invitations will be given out from Panhel during the morning and ut noon a preference luncheon may be held. However, this had not been put definitely into the plans. Upperclass pledges may move into sorority houses any time after the luncheon, pro vided it is held, otherwise they FOR THE PfflCt ur uwj TYPEWRITINGSHORTHAND BOOKKEEPINGBUSINESS MACHINES There is a shortage of trained workers. Get started toward a good job at once. You may start to school at the Lincoln School of Commerce on August 10, or any day in August. You may pay your first month of tuition, which is $25.00 and your tuition will be paid up to October 3. It is a "Two-In-One" offer. . Save a month's tuition and be ready for a job one month ahead of time. If You Plan on Part-Time Work while attending the Lincoln School of Commerce, it will pay yom to (et here early. It takes time to make your contacts and the beat jobs to first. Write or call an today. Lincoln School of Commerce 209 NO. 14 ST. LINCOLN. NKBR. W. A. ROBBINS. PRES. 1 WluwiV1 1 .. T or"" I I a n 111 V" WARTIME COLLEGE GIRLS HGVLAND- 0 1 1 Is the Only tciai WjaJemoiselle Store in oCincotn Smooth is the word for the college fashions for 1942 presented in the Mademoiselle Clinic, which our Mrs. Leadley, Miss Hershner and Miss Ford attended L85, combined wih a clever college board's desire to be particularly attracive for the boys in uniform, must go the credit for this really on the beam season. leep jackets, peg top dresses, knee length slacks, and the soft suit without which no wardrobe is complete are only a few of the many smart items which are presented in the college Lssue of Mademoiselle, now on display at Hovland -Swanson. Soft Dressy Suits Flecy Box Coats Semi-Date Dresses Campus Skirts Beautiful Furs Famous Zip-Lining Coats Tailored Tweed Suits Blouses and Sweaters New Fall 1942 Shoes Selected to accentuate your back-to-college ward robe. You're sure to find the correct shoe at the price you wish to pay in this complete collection. Debutantes 6.95 to 10.95 Naturalizers $4.75 I. Millers 10.95 to 16.95 Foot-Savers 9.95 to 12.95 Joye Play Shoes 4.45 to 7.95 Debutante 8.95