ggsqsyCA.iT,-. Of,. T?Wo-ins. - THE DAILY NEBRASKAN She g)allE Tflebrasftan THE PROPERTY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA. Lincoln. Nobraska. PUBLISHED EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY AND MONDAY BY THE STUDENT PUB. BOARD. Publication Office, 126 No. 14th St. EDITORIAL STAFF. EdItor-ln-Chlef Ross King, '08 Managing Editor Q. L. Fenlon, '08 Asioolato Editor R. L. Harris, 10 BU8INE8S STAFF. Manager Qeorgo M. Wallaco, '10 Circulator W. A. Jones, '10 Assistant Circulator L. J. Weaver, MO OFFICE HOUR8. EdItor-ln-Chlef 2 to 4 p.m. Manager 9 to 10 a. m. Editorial and Business Office: BASEMENT, ADMINISTRATION BLDQ. Postofflce, Station A, Lincoln, Neb. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, $2.00 PER YEAR Payable In Advanco Single Copies. 5 Cents Each Telephones: Bell A 1466, Auto 1888 INDIVIDUAL NOTICES will bo charged for nt the rate of 10 conts per Insertion for ovory flf toon words or fraction thereof. Faculty notices and UnlvorBlty bulletins will gladly be published freo Entored at tho postofneo at Lincoln, Nebraska, as second-class mall matter Under tho Act of Con proas of March 8. 1870. Next Friday aftornoon Minnesota University will send a track team to Lincoln to compete with the Cornhusk- ers. The meet will take placo nt the State Fair grounds. The opposition of the Q. A. R. piused Manager Eager to change the date of the meet, which was originally scheduled for Decora tion Day. Minnesota has already conceded that she will lose tho meet. Manager Eager wrote Manager H. E. Leach, Of the Gopher team that he would pay half tho cost of a pennant to go to the winning team. Leach answered that he did not care to pay half the price "Of a banner to present to Nebraska University. Although the meet will bo held at the Fair Grounds, there ought to be a good crowd out. It Is costing consider able to secure a meot of this character, which Is not at all what a Kansas or foro examination, but to require that, a student do work In two recognized departments of the University simulta neously Is neither reason nor Justice. Tho result of such injustices to the Froshmen Is that they leave Bchool nauseated by over discipline nnd re turn to register for a sluffer's course the next year. It is a hard provision that for nine students In ten the first two years in college are a horrid nightmare; that the third Is only bear able; that by the end of the fourth when he hns learned how to go to col lege nnd when college has first begun to be a glad fnmlllar home-like place, the whole thing Is lopped off In a trice, nnd we carry nwny n bunch of sick memories of what might have been. Ex. The comparatively small attendance at regular chapel exercises to which the hour Is devoted for all classes ns compared with a rather full attendance at such special exercises ns that of Dr. Wiley's lecture lost week, leads to the Inquiry of whether using one fourth of the recitation time of the morning for exercises regularly at tended by a very small portion of the Btudents Ib worth while. The students who attend these special convocations "sluff" their classes either alone or In company with the rest of the class and the Instructor, and although smiling on such a thing would not at first thought be wise, yet the waste of time for the regular convocation Is enormous. Why not let those who desire to attend de votional exercises refrain from regis tering for an eleven o'clock and those Who attend only for the educational side of convocation decide whether the given program Is more Important than the recitation on That particular day? Ono one-third more recitation hours be fore dinner would make an enormous difference to many students who now must stay on the campus all day for one afternoon recitation. S6voral college papers are entering Into politics by giving their support to A Souvenir Spoon would be just the thing for a graduation remembrance .or, when you leave take one home with you. There is something so "tasty" and so pleasing about a souvenir 3poon. They are serviceable too. "We have an elegant line to pick from Uni as well as Lincoln. HENDERSON to, HALD, 132 NO. 10TH STREET local moot would ho. Unless good competitions like this are pushod by the students without any field, track work will soon decline in Interest! This afternoon the cadets leave for camp and tho Freshmen are experienc ing tho biggest Injustice of all the In justices ofjjthe first year in school. They are iryhig to get their work in shape bofore leaving and in order to do this must do, two weeks' work in one. Why such an uncompromising spirit . between departments should exist year after year is hard to understand. The military work is absolutely required and yet a good many papers are plan ned so -that the week of camp 1b in cluded Ip tho time of preparation. Fre quently professors give final tests, a large part of whlcli are on the material covered in the last few ''days of Bchool. Undoubtedly tho wook of rest from, studies at.camp is not a bad thing be- different presidential candidates. The Cornell Sun and the Brown Herald are lined up for Governor Hughes. The Yale News favors Secretary Taft, an alumnus. The Pennsylvnnlan Is for Senator Knox. The Daily Piincetonlan, by favoring Judge Gray, a democrat of Delaware, Is the only college dally which lias taken a stand for democ racy. Tho Cornell Sun says tho fol lowing of the Prlncetonlan's attitude: "We congratulate it upon getting into the contest with a candidate of such caliber, and venture the hope "that he may even be successful In securing the nomination, in which case, with the Sun's candidate, Governor Hughes, In opposition, the Intelligent American citizen must rest easy, knowing that which ever party was victorious, tho country would be well run for tho next four years." O. H. Froy, florist, 1133 O 8L 1,000 "V PAIR of the finest shoes that can be made they are Ziegler Bros. Samples on sale at about One-Half their retail price. This is a snap you. YOUNG MEN HERE IS SOMETHING THAT WILL INTEREST YOU. Lot 1. 214 Pair Tan $5.00 Oxfords, $4,00 Lot 2. 195 Pair Tan $4.00 Oxfords, $3,00 Lot 3. 68 Pair Tan $3.00 Oxfords, $2,50 Lot 4.-256 Pr. Pat. Colt $5 Oxfords, $3,50 Lot 5. 315 Pr. Pat. Colt $4 Oxfords, $3,00 Lot 6. 187 Pr. Pat. Colt $3.50 Oxfords $2,50 Lot 7. 187 Pr. Dull Calf $5 Oxfords, $3.50 Lot 8. 218 Pr. 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