The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 04, 1916, Image 4

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    The College World
S . :vWS::WM ' v.-" 'N. I .&:: Witt i 1 ft-.ww?.:,. u
BOARDING HOUSE
RULES GIVEN OUT
The Hoarding House Committee of (
the University of Texas calls the at-
Allowing regulations:
1. The engagement of a room un
less otherwise agreed upon is equiv
alent to a contract to remain in the
room for at least one term or be re
sponsible for the rent for that period.
2. If reasons arise for a change
during the terra, the student should,
before- moving, refer the matter to the
Hoarding House Committee by tele
phoning the Registrar or the Dean
of Women.
3. It is, of course, expected that
the student will pay for furniture
damaged or destroyed by him, ordi-j
nary wear and tear excepted.
4. The women students are ex
pected to comply faithfully with these
regulations:
(1) To limit their social engage
ments to three a week as the maximum.
(2) To UismiBS their callers at
10:30 p. m.
(3) Toy require chaperonage for
automobiling, picnics, or parties.
The University expects it to be a
point of honor and of chivalry among
our young men to respect these regu
lations that are necessary for the wel
fare of the young women and to aid
in their observance. Exchange.
PAROS
So good-by! The dreamy splendor
of the mornings
Hreaking over yonder range shall
cal you back;
Dusk and dawn and night and noon be
filled with yearnings
For the cattle-trail, the rough and
ample shack.
So good-by! Before your face the
East is lying,
Old, and worn, and haggard with a
thousand woes.
Ah! you'll long to sit again a-saddle.
flying
Past the dawn-dew, the odor of the
Schembeclt's
ORCHESTRAL
AND
CABARET
SERVICE
EVERYWHERE!
WHY?
NOTE Can furnish small com
binations forhoust partits with
instrumints such as Banjos and
Saxaphonas and rtasonable,
too.
rose
Tucker &
Shean
1123 O St
Manufacturing Jewelers and
Opticians
Class Pins and Rings of
All Kinds
I
When the mother calls, we question
not, but answer,
j And the mother East Is calling rou,
j I know;
But above the dancers' music and the
j dancer
j You'll be hearing songs the Eastmen
j never knew
I
Songs that dript their wordless music
down the starry
! Nights we've rode the range togeth
' er, you and I;
Thoughts so fragile you would scarce
ly think they'd carry
Over all the days and miles that
interlle!
There will come to you, like lovers,
softly gliding
Into all your thousand doings and
your dreams,
The camp-song, the round-up, the rid
ing, The wolfs howl, the brawling of the
streams.
So good-by! Loose the broncho from
his tether;
He'll be ready, and you'll want him
by and by;
j 'Twill be sunny heart, and song, and
ranchers weather
When we ride the range together,
you and I!
Hugh J. Hughes.
Giffen Bcaute
Shop
EDITH BELLE LEWIS
237 So. 14th B1926
We build up the scanty locks
' with Curls. Puffs, Transform
ations or Switch
OHIO STATE EXPECT8
I r.ocTecT tcau cvrD
Columbus, Ohio. When John W.
Wllce calls his Ohio state football
forces for their first practice of the
1916 year he will be greeted by a
squad of Scarlet and Gray warriors
surpassing in combined ability any
mass of gridiron athletes ever gath
ered under the banner of the Columbus
school.
Not in years and surely not since'
Ohio state became a member of the
big nine, has the prospect of a win
ning team been so bright as it is this
fall. Only a few men were lost by
graduation in June. The biggest loss
was in Captain Boughton, whose place
at tackle will be acceptably filled by
either Dan Flowers or P. A. Holtcamp,
each of whom Is almost the equal of
the former leader. Exchange.
A New Bunch
Glassy Tics
just arove. Come in and
give them the once-over.
3 For
2)Jil 51.00
Regular SOc Quality
gPUIAP PPTrrPMTTNl WHEATS
P
MEDICAL SERVICE
INSURED BY MEANS
OF A SMALL FEE
By way of Insurance against sick
ness, a medical fee of $3.00 Is re
quired o fevery student In residence
at the University. For this fee the
student is entitle dto the following
services:
1. Free consultatlo nwlth one of
the University physicians. --Dr. Gil
bert for men and Dr. Holllday for
women, during their office hours In
room 152.
2. If their attendance is request
ed by the student or his family the
University physicians will make with
out charge, at leant five hospital calls
and three other calls on any student
who Is confined by illness to his home
or to a hospital, one of these three
to be a night call. .
3. The ambulance or carriage re
quired to convey a student to the
hospital will be paid for out of the
hospital fund.
4. Charges for pathological exam
iratkms and for the administrations
of anesthetics, when made under the
authorization of a University physi-
ti Wm Hf'M '
it - v
p ' -
:viv.
iff f lm&
I
Gentlemen:
The early Fall models of
the famous
nrir Irattii OUntljpa
are ready.
If you want to see the
authorative fashions
in a multitude of rich
fabrics, this is your op
portunity !
$20 to $35
"THE STORE AHEAD"
Mayer Bros. Co.
ELI SHIRE, President
Ml
clan, will be paid for out of the medical
fund, each payment to be subject also
to the approval of the president of the
University.
5. Lodging, board, ana nursing at
a hospital for twenty-five days in case
of necessity. Medicine and services of
physicians other than as specified
above are not included.
The University otok this precaution
ary measure some few years ago and
since that time the medical fee has
met with the approval of thousands of
students. At times, a new student will
complain of this fee, but as soon as he
sees his or her roommate's hospital
bill paid by the University, all such
"gripes' are cancelled. Exchange.
TIME3 DO CHANGE
The good old "rah-rah" days have
passed. The freshman who expects to
find here the realization of Frank
Merri well's college experiences. Is
doomed to disappointment, for In this
year of grace 1916, such things exist
only In the so-called "college" stories
written by men and women who have
never seen the Inside of a college or
university.
Yes, the good old days are no more.
The enterprising photographer dis
covered that yesterday when he
sought a freshman who would volun
teer to be thrown ?n the boneyard for
the movies. No one was found who
would fall for even such an attractive
lure as a season ticket to one of Cham
paign's leading moving picture houses.
It Is well that the scene was not pho
tographed, although we are sure it
would have made a good picture, for
it would have been a deliberate mis
representation of college life as it ex
ists here at Illinois.
The freshman who fears he will be
thrown in the boneyard or be com
pelled to suffer any other indignities
may quickly dispel his apprehension.
We don't do those things now, nor do
we clip the freshman's hair, even
though that be the popular miscon
ception. Hazing in any form what
soever is against the rules of the uni
versity, and so strictly has the rule
been enforced in the past that viola
tlons have been exceedingly rare.
Xeither do we plant claa numerals
and football scores on the sidewalks
and buildings. The red fading marks
of such depredations are relies of by
gone days.
It is not because we lack spirit that
college pranks of the story book type
are missing at Illinois, but because
we are living in a different age, we
have a different conception of college
life, a broader outlook, and a higher
appreciation of things worth while,
Daily IUInL
last spring 700 undergraduates asked yards of earth removed by the stu
lermission to begin digging and to dents in completing the excavation.
legin the Job with student contrlbu- Work is done by squads of fifty with
i ions. 1 picks, shovels and wheelbarrows. Ex-
The building is to be 60x200 and it change. .
FOOTBALL PROSPECTS
BRIGHT AT U. OF IOWA
University of Iowa. What dope
sters saw for the Iowa football team
before the opening of practice for the
season has come to pass, and there
is now every indication that the Iowa
eleven for the year will have a line
Trh'.ch Trill bo ess cf ths LfiavlSot in
the conference and a backfleld which
will be about the same in weight as
many that have fought for Iowa no
the gridiron' In year past Excbaneg.
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY
STUDENTS TO DIG CELLAR
When administrative efforts failed
to raise $275,000 to build a Physics
Engineering building at Nw York
university, the students have decided
to begin the work for the foundation.
In a petition to the university council
Is expected there will be 100,000 cubic
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