SUMMER SCHOOL HEBBASKAN OUR UNIVERSITY DEANS SUMMER SCHOOL: NEBRASKAN Editor and Manager. . . . A. R. Swenson Associate Editor C. Ray Gates Reportorial Staff W. W. Wilson Edgar Boshult E. W. Smith . J. E. Morgan J. H. Moseley Carleton B. Yoder Alberta Ackley Florence Dunn Helen Stidworthy Leonard Trester Office of Student Activities, Basement Administration Hall, Phone B2597 ! i f M ! Published tri-weekly, on Mondays Wednesdays, and Fridays during the Summer Session, by the Student fudm cation Board. . The Palladian open air meeting on the campus Saturday night is a good precedent for similar meetings in the fnfnr Thfi University ramDUS is one of the beautiful spots in Lincoln during the summer and the students should make It the center for their social recreation as well as for their intellectual endeavors. That Summer School Cornhusker Section . The suggestion in the last issue of the Nebraskan for a summer school section of the Cornhusker has been favorably received. It Is hoped that the Cornhusker management will take immediate steps to gather the material necessary for it. Especial attention should be paid to getting snap shots from the picnic next Wednesday. The time left for getting pictures of the various summer school organizations is so short as to demand immediate action. BRIEF BITS OF NEWS The Comercial Geography class, un der Mrs. England, are planning a series of interesting trips to industrial places, some of which are Hardy's furniture and rug departments, Cushman Motor Works, farm implements and stock at State Farm, planing mills, packing house, etc. The first trip is to be made Monday, afternoon. Principal Clinton Sheets of Bridge port, Nebraska, was a visitor at the Neraska School of Business last week. Girls, let's have some fresh flowers in the Y. W. rooms each day. YOU KNOW HIM We know a man quite ill at eeeeeee; Too soon he changed his bvdddd. In them, it seems, he nearly froooo; Now all he does is to blow his noooo, .Declaring at moBt every sneeee He's coming down with some diseeee. His kind has often met your gaaaa A cold will lay him up for daaaa, Afraid of what they call catrrrr; Won't eat and, too, cuts out cigarrr. And wonders while in bed he laaaaa. Why we don't send him swell bokkkk. The fact is, all his friends are yyyy, And so we're waiting till he diiiii. Philadelphia Star. The Faculty and the Summer Picnic About a score of students are giving n large share of their time and energy on various committees to make next Wednesday's picnic a success. And according to indications they will ac (omplish their purpose so far as the Ftudents are concerned. But what about the faculty? If the outing is to be as it purports, an all-university picnic, it should include faculty as well as students. ELLERY WM. DAVIS, Ph. D. Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences IRVING SAMUEL CUTTER, B. Sc. M. D. Dean of the Colege of Medicine At the Ivy Day picnic in the spring the faculty members are usually con spicuous by their absence. Indeed, they usually go farther than that and hold a separate picnic of their own, the faculty men's . picnic, instead of joining with the students. We hope the summer school faculty will show better school spirit. Perhaps it is true that the average college professor is not interested in three-legged race or a fat man's peed contest, but be that as it may, if he is a true teacher he is interested in his students in their recreation well as in their work. It would as be of benefit to both professors and students if they learned to recognize each other in other places and under other circumstances than the class room affords. The summer school picnic is an opportunity for such acquaintance to be made. THE COMPLAINT OF A STUDENT Notes! Notes! Notes! The Profs insist on our making them, Our arms are lame from the taking them, We wait for the day of forsaking them, But when shall it come to pass? Our poor brains reel when acramming them, . Down memory's gullet we're ramming them, Time comes when we'll be "exam"-lng them. For we keep them for every class. My prof is dynamic, impressive, and quick, His teaching has wide-spread re nown, If I only could listen, his sayings would stick, But I'm busy writing them down. He lectures In marvelous English, quite true. Fine expression and gesture, I think, But to value them right is what people can do. They're wasted in mere pen ard ink. LUCIUS ADELNO SHERMAN, Ph. D. LL. D. Dean of the Graduate College ' . v.i. . ': a,. . ' WILLIAM GRANGER HASTINGS Dean of the College of Law I can search thru my notebooks with all my power, The key phrase from my scribbling has slipped; And when I accomplish twelve pages an hour, I've trouble in reading my script You've interests keen in this topic or that? I've studied on that, and I'll look. I can't answer your question right off the bat, But I've got it all down in a book. My writing's a mighty poor teacher to me, I get things much better when said; If my notebook is where my facts ought to be, Why, what earthly use is my head? Notes! Notes! Notes! The Profs insist on our making them, Our arms are lame from the taking them, We wait for the day of forsaking them, But when shall it come to pass? Our poor brains reel when a cramming them, Down memory's gullet we're ramming them, Time comes when well be "exam"-ing them, Alas! Still I make notes, and remember them not. Twelve pages an hour or ten. But, how can I remember the Which- ness I What, Or diBsert on the Whyness of When, If all that I hear, Goes In at my ear, And out at my fountain pen? "That's a fine suit you have there. What is it?" "A dynamo suit." "How's that?" "It's charged." Dr. Corinne Larimore, Osteopath, 321 First Natl. Bank. B 1842. 15t VP CARL CHRISTIAN ENGBERG, Ph. D. Executive Dean i OSCAR VAN PELT STOUT, C. E. Dean of the College of Engineering (By courtesy of the Cornhusker) omk Shop 237 South 14th St. B-1926 SWiTCriES Made from Combings Call And Ask About It amimniimQit8itUui8rwmmraionitmniutnjmimmiiiiiminTB HereisftsAnswerfm YEB5TERS I Nev UiTEruiAnoriAL Tie Kekrum Kasm Every dar in your talk ani reading. t i home, on the street car, in tbe office, shop and school ron likely question the mean- f Inr of some jms word. A Wend aani. g ''What makes mortar harden?" Von seek thelocaUonofIeAJTofrtortheproiiun- elation of Jajutau What U apfcils eoaXJ f inis new u-eauoo imwni iction.Forelfn Words, Trades, Arts sad Science, wit anal aulHortt. . 400,000 Words. OOO Illustration. Cost $400,000. 2700 Par the smw dtvidatpmg, char acterised as "A Stroke of Uenlns." MaPsparEiRloK India paper. What satis faction to own the MiTriam Webster In a form so lirht and so convenient to naeli One half the thickness anas weight of Regular Edition. BsgnlarCdKIoit On strong book paperWt. 171 1 US. CIS 1S71 a 7 inch. Writ. Hi it i lllll M irrra -,', jr.:.. V,"-. 'A .- J ;A Oifffon mm .uiiifITniw',1 M W ill ti-illlllllllll-'MMl J ft o : 1 liWIIWIIIBilBmiHiS IT"