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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 16, 1914)
-v. a v ... - '. ..-raw $1 II, :no. i. UMVERSITyOF-NfiBRlSKA, IJNCOIiN, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1914. PRICE 5 CENTS. v.3 aafe. 1. 1 fin V GREER'S EFFICIENT FORCE IN TniM H ANDLES THINGS WELL 3. SliPUiFlED BY CARD SYSTEM Be Prompt at the Appelate Hear ana" -Facilitate Matters Materially js ; S the Request efTeaeWha est the Burdens. The instructioflB' this year are that: ' for registration 1. All ftfew lu- deats will FIRST consultthe Regis trar Ja Memorial Hall, weentzance. Nobs of the following iastractions ap ply to XEW STUDiITS. - . AIL' except bow students, first ae care aaeliuament and registration ticketMenOTfcd Hall 12 far an hour ia, which to have class assign ments made aad to register, Tiokek are aot"aeat by aaaiL Allow saMckat time to see yoar adviser aad dean aad to, prepare your application before year hour ef regietratioa. 3. AIL except aew atadeats, will proceed, as follows to register after isecariag the assigament aad registra tion ticket above: ' To. 1. Adviser la ,departsaeat oHce or In the Armory. 2. If aaar?radaaie wosaa), jpeaa. of ia jfcy&Trf. . 3. Beaa. of yoar college la, AraioVy r (if ia ta Ccllese of! Arts aad Steiemoes) the Koetratk BeanL ir'aaWnaerB XaBial Ha to aave. appHeatioa saade eat, 5. Aseigaaaeat Coamittee la Me morial HalL 6. Registrar's oSce. Nate: Toar adviser" will sapplyyoa wlta a slip which be will Ml la aad approve as yoar aabjecta for regis tratioiL This East be approved by the deaa of year college. (Uader gralaate woatea will seoare tae ap proval ef tie Daaa ef Wee befere. geiag to tbedeaa of tbe college). lege, m to the steaegraphers ia Me sorial HalL who will copy the ap proved Est of yocr aabjecta oa the ap pUcatlea blaaks, the latter beiag given to yoato take to tae Assigaseat Pmamittnn aad thereafter to the Reg totrars oftce. 4. Be preseat at the Aseigaateat Ceatatittee ia Meaorial Hall aad the Registrar's eSce, AdaUaktratioa Hall 183, promptly at the aaartsr hoars aaased ea the Assignment aad Regis- tratiea tieket Ia the-Cettee of Arts aad Scleaces stadeats are permitted to choose their "eleottre atwHes wlthoat refereace to asajera aad atiaors, hat each stadeat befere gradaatiea aust complete at least two. years werk ia aeaae eae'de partateat (aalaimaai 1 hears). Stu deate who wish to aeeeialise after oae year of reaideace may soieet aay de artateat, with aay pfofeeser ia the depart anat aa advieer aad nay iahe therefei a asa)or er aet lees than 24 hears er aore thaa it hears; aach atadoato ahaM tetaJa the right to cheoso aay eieptire saeiect aside freaa the xaiec (Stadeats ia the Teaeaers CsMage ahall aaeet Ihe asajer Sac the TJal- varsity Teaeaers certifieate.) At the ead ef the year, aay whe ia aet taking a aujer may select prefeaaor ia the ef Arte hex adrwer consultation j.ta; the daa of the col lege. All 'second year students in the Col lege of Arts and. Sciences, will be as signed to advisers at the time of r,B curyw5'th.e"AseIgameHt and Registra tion, tickets la Memorial Hall 102. If a student does not secure "a reals- ((ration, ticket by S. P. m., Friday, Sep- temper iVor iaiis te present aimseii: in -reaclaess atvhe hour assigned on als tickir ae, juuy.. be coapeUed to rVsi3terr;the weekfoKowing the rega.; tar 'ptaSBta!n:ikl '?ae rins- thoiwnaltyif "payiag tfea late ?fegistratioa,fee of jS.OO. Gradaate stadents and city teachers aiay register dariag the wees;: follow? ing the regalar registration days. RegtelriiCou m the foar-year couie" of the College of Medicine la Osoalia boWs there Septeber 18-19. To avoid coHfusion and delay have applications prepared and approved and everything in readiness, in ad vtiBce of yoar boar of registratioa. We Count on your aid. M. E. "BECOMES AN M. M. Member ef Nebrackan Editorial Staff "Hae Married Kept Secret. Since April Eleventh. Cloyd Ll Stewart waa married April 11, to. Miss Edaa Charlotte Kinalson, at St. Joe, -Miaouii,vthe ceremoay tak ing place In the XwCdpal Cathedral of that cky. Mrs. Stewart's home is ia IJgoaier, ladhiaa, iaad for the pasf1state Fair Exhibit Played up by the few" years aae has aeea wtik tae xea- ceapie bad been aceaaiatea, for more ihaa -a year aad theicJafteMlag eame threagh their work oa the Icefam c iroak. , Mr. Stewart ie a popalar member of the senior elaes aad deriag his college career has been premlaeat ia dra matics aad nwepap9T work. -He was presideat ef the Jaaipr class the first semester, and was made a member of the Ianoceats at the ead of his Junior year. His heme is in ijaramie, Wy oming. Mr. aad Mrs. Stewart will reside in this oRy watte 24r, SKcwart completes his law cearae. They are residing at arement t 48fi South lth. APPENKfTIS CAUSES DEATH IF-KBR. MM Stebblaa Waa a Preminent Sealer &m One ef the Energetic Students en the Campus. Guy L- Stehhins of Gothenburg, Nebraska, aad a senior ia the Univer sity taking arts aad sciences, died at 3 o'clock yesterday after a harried operation for acute appendicitis. He completed his sophomore year at Wes- leyaa University where he was a mem ber of the society of Everets. He ea- tered the TJalveraity ef Nebraska met year aad took ap werk ataialy ia the peUtical scieace departmeat prepara tory 4 takiag a fear-year ceaiae ia the Harvard TJaiveratty. Although Gay was ia the TJaiverafty a oompara tively ahort time he has- left aa In delible Impraislea ia the hearts aad lives ef as alL Shortly after eoattacj lato the Uaivereity he was pledged aad iaitiated mte 33Ma Haeflea where he immodtoanify hosame a meriag iae- fcH-'iathatlritteo(tfcet a. TOm frieaea ea the campaa easeM their sympathy to his bereaved HARD OH MOVIES Splendid Pictures ef Aeroplane in Flight Pari of the University Extension Work. 'Or. Coadra, head of the Geographical department, of the University has been busy the 'past few days clipping and arranging moving picture, films taken of the State Fair in action. Among them there is the first perfect film made of an aeroplane flight, a very difficult leat because" of tSe clouds and the difficulty of keeping the camera properly focused. The Doctor's ef forts have been directed along the line of soil conservation and it is to these ends that he is now devoting his time to the moving; picture part of the Uni versity extension work. Since "be ginning .his moving picture plan Proj- feasor Coadra has reached over one hundred and twenty thousand people, who, would otherwise perhaps never have known anything of Nebraska Uni versity's really practical aad beneficial mission among them. PRQMMEIIT PAPER REFERS 70 UIIYEBSiTY I , 'ffeejHe Active. Is exhibiting some of. its werk at the state fair tarn year and ia illus trating there the field it is designed to cover, the state university has taken another step toward closer con tact with the people of Nebraska. It has opeaed ap aa entirely aew chan nel for pablictty of the big school. It has also indicated 'that in the futare it will endeavor not only to cater to its students bat to acually reach out id grasp ordinary taxpayers and compel them to listen to information about the higher educational side of the gigantic corporation in wmcn they are stockholders. The interest taken in the exhibit shows that there was nn immediate aad manifest reffpoase on the part of those whom it was intended to reach. Many people learned more than they ever knew before about the university. They so expressed themselves fully and frankly: They appeared to be delighted with the opportunity of ob taining this information. Many who viewed the exhibit in fact became in terested enough to visit the univer sity itself later -n. Scores of men 1 women denoted asfcAishmeat at the variety and thoroughness of the courses oCered aad at the multiplicity of activities preseat ia each an in stitution. Many of these men and women were parests of hoys aad girls who are stadeats bow at the naiver- sity or who have graduated. And the greater share of them admitted that their, previous knowledge of the school aad lbs Mfe had been very lim ited. They promised to keep ia closer touch wkh St ia the futare. Their in terest was obviously stimulated or en tirely leorjolod by the exhibit. This year's exhibit waa ia the natare ef aa experiment. If the heads of a rthe school are wise, if they have Hsteasd to the oemment and cemmea- MfrUoB of these who aaw it, they will eatiaae It year by year ia ealarged Sena. There is much to aaia from such ,an exhibit both on the part of the aniversity and the students to come. The more the people know about the school the more intelligently wllllts needs be met and the more readily will the taxpayers be respon sive to changes wnich will better en able it to carry out its mission in state life. The university is of increasing im portance to the people of this state. The sooner all the taxpayers become acquainted with its possibilities and the principles under which it must be conducted the sooner will it be re moved from the field of uncertainty. The school has a secure, piace in Nebraska hearts. Its future means much to those who have passed out of its halls as well as to those who are destined yet to enter them. When Nebraskans know their institution they will do nothing to endanger its pros pects. Its life will then be of. more serious concern to them than that of "any other governmental institution.1' Omaha World-Herald. HAND BOOK OUT FOR BENEFIT OF STUDENTS Students Flock to. the Office in Order to Get One ef the Booklets Ready Demand. The "3?' book is out A copy can be secured free at the Y. M. C. A. headquarters in the Temple. Hun dreds are already gone. The editorial staff was: Glenn S. Everts, editor; Hugh M. McVicker, associate editor; Gertrude Scribner, associate editor; Paul L. Martin, busi ness manager. This handbook is valuable to all students and especially the freshmen. In it is found a list of all student pub lications, student organizations, fra ternities and sororities; also ath letic records and a football schedule for this falL Don't make "un of Andrew Carnegie. If Europe had followed his plan of dis arming and settling eqaabbles at the Hague, there would have been no war. AWGWJUI TO BE READY FOR STUDENTS SOON Helmet and Quill Society Composed of Thirteen Members Will Put Out Publication. The first number of Awgwan, the University tunny book, will be Ttff the presses soon. Awgwan is published every two weeks by the local wits and artists and the management promises a number of new features for this year's paper. The cover will be run in three colors and the book will be well filled with jokes, essays, illustra tions and campus poetry. Awgwan is published under the auspices of the Helmet and Quill So ciety, aa organization of thirteen men interested in the welfare of the paper. New members are taken into ihia so ciety at the end of each year from among the' most active contributors. Awgwan was started two years ago in response to the need for a paper such aa most of the "big eastern uni versities possess in the form of Cornell "Widow." Harvard "Lampoon," and H has rapidly taken its place ameag the foremost university fanny books of the eoaatry. FOML MANY OF THE OLD MEN BACK AND READY FOR FALL PRACTICE. COACH STIEHM SAYS LITTLE Regular Work Begins Next Monday But Several of the Men Are Al ready Seen-at Their Daily Exercises. As is usually the case, at this time of the year Coach Stiehm finds a real joy awaiting him. The thunderbolt that he carefully forged last fall and polished up last spring has developed Several flaws during the summer. It will do to hurl.against Washburn and Morningside perhaps, but it will take a team of real championship calibre; to oat-score such opponents as the Jayhawks, Hewkeyes, or the Michigan, Aggies. A first class center must be de veloped. Roy Cameron, the hansom- smashing tackle of last year's eleven seems a likelyNcandidate for that posi tion. Also two ends must be found. The man1 who tackles any task with out a goal in view is, handicapped. Stiehm finds himself doubly handi capped, for neither Beck nor Mastin, stars of the outside; positions last year, will be hack. The rest Of the line looks strong with Captain Halligan, Cameron, tAhbort, and Ballis, all veter ans oa the job, and Corey, Caley, Fouts, Norris, Richards, and some oth ers to pick from. In the back field will be Dick Ruther ford of the Titian locks and the loud war cry, and Howard with his master ful toe. Around these two Stiehm ex pects to build a record scoring xna- fchine. For the other two back field positions he will have Porter, Wilson, Hawkins, and several others to choose from. There is a rumor that Herb Potter, who won an "N" in nlneteen twelve will register this week. He mi- that position, if he decides to try for it. Guy Chamberlain, the big ex-Wes-leyaa athlete who was the sensation of last year's Freshman team, is "un certain as to whether he will return to school. In a letter to Coach Stiehm he explained that he was thinking seriously of staying out of school this year. He may yet decide to come. If he should fail to appear it will be a hard blow to ..ebraska's prospects for a championship team. What the Coach Said. ' In regard to Nebraska's prospects for a championship team, Coach E. O. Stiehm is inclined to be non-commit tal to say the least "It won't do," said,, e, "for us to be too enthusiastic over our prospects. Prospects at this time don't justify it." Freshmen! Freshmen!! There is a position in the business department of the -Daily Nebraskan open to an energetic freshman who has either had experience in the newspaper business or is interested in that class of work. This position will giva the right kind of a man a "training that will permit him to apply for a higher position during the next school year. Write either to the busi ness department of the Daily (Nebras kan or (ee personally Frank Perkins or Raesdl F. Clark. .'.'-- 3t- ft