SUMMER NEBRASKAN I'iiIiIIhIkhI TwkiIiiv. Tlnirmlii.v nml Sutur dn.v f 'ai li week by Hie I niverNity of Nelwmkii. Kntcrpil iih m-coml chin matter at tlic Mist(il'fiv lit liiiu'iiln, NcliriiHka, umlef Act of I'onifroHH, March H, 1S71. Ot'fr-It'lAI. INIVKKHITY I'I'IIMCATION Indrr.tlie direction of the (Student I'ub Hrationn Hoard. uliwrlptlon ruto, Mc for the Hummer. Single ropy, 5c. - MANAOKMKNT: .lurk AukIIii Miinnitor Wilhiir IVI-rcon Editor .KKI'OKTKKS Voltot Torrey I.nura Kooney i:tliel Herman W'eidey TonkiiiHon llliinche iemeiiK '. F. Howniun OFK1CK HOI KS: MuniiRrr uml Kditor ! to 4 Iull.v Mudent Activitle Offlee, HiiHement, West Knd Adnilnlntriition llulldliiK. place for students anil professors' cars and as a university possession. It does not actually belong to the school but seems a vital part of it. Univer sity students and professors would cer tainly feel a great relief if some of the noisy traffic on that street could be elinifnated. l.n Qiimmap til T .tlfln frtltnu. i ("l II ,1 t nti1fn n.nn n bjiuhm 1 1 1 ouiuiiii j.ihvvih v.v... i mi vi uiru naa n Ilieniupr (f ii i n i.ai 4 li Ar u-lll trn in Clnt lipn tin rar U'llArft ing a short wedding trip. In Septem- university graduating class He U'flg n tnflniln. ftr t Mr. West will be the superintendent of) l"e '"ocents DEAN BUCK It is with a feeling of regret and at the same time good wishes that the university learns that Dean l'hilo M. Buck will leave soon for a trip to India In an exchange professorship with Prof. Joshi. Dean Buck has grown to be one of the most well liked members of the university faculty and he will be sorely missed during his six months stay in the eastern mm try. While students would selfishly pre fer that Dean Buck stay in Lincoln, it is with a feeling of pride that they hid him farewell. The feeling which comes when a friend is highly honor ed is the feeling which the entire uni versity has regarding Itiuk's trip to India. Of hundreds of university pro fessors, Dean Huck was chosen by the Carnegie institute as the one who should make the'trip to India. Dean Buck will be missed at Ne braska. He will be gladly welcomed when he returns early in the spring to again assume his duties here. His record among Nebraska students is enviable as is also his record as a uni versity instructor. As yet a young man, he has reached a point which no: many university professors reach. And in doing so he has not lest sight of the fact that all students are human. That accounts for his success as a univer sity executive and for the feeling of close friendship which he has gained wih all university students he has met The university bids Dean Buck a happy journey and a quick return to Nebraska. CAST YOUR BALLOT Students of the summer school are regarded as residents of Lincoln in so far as voting privileges go. Every student in the university has the right to cast a vote in the primary election on July 18 in the same way as Lincoln citizens. But to do this they must register with the city clerk. It is the duty of every student to either go to his home town to vole or else register "in Lincoln and cast a vote here. Proper officials cannot bc chosen unless till persons having the voting right exercises that right. Be sure you are registered ?o that yoa can cast a ballot on July IS. schools. Harry Weakley and Eton Summers left July 1 for Nuckolls county on a Barkley eradication campaign. Mary Ellen Inglis left July 1 with her parents for a month's outing trip to Hot Springs, S. D. Rita Atkinson is nature-love super visor at Camp Kiwanis, Milford. Esther Scott is visiting relatives at Breckenridge, Mo. Glen Weakley is spending the sum mer at Albert Lea, Minn., where he is working on a 15,000 acre drainage project for the Paine Investment Com pany of Omaha. His work consists of surveying and mapping the land and sampling and analyzing the soil. He is stationed lit headquarters camp on the edge of Lake Geneva and re ports the lishing line there. Betty Clark is spending the summer at Ragan, Nebr. and was business manager of tle lftl() Cornhusker. During the spring t,f his senior year he was agent of student activities and carried full time Work During the war Chadderdon served in the United States navy at tlm Great Lakes. Later he came back to Nebraska to assume an instructor1,, position in the Student Navy Trainim; corps. TWELFTH STREET NUISANCE Twelfth street is a street of nuis ances. So say professors who try t.t teach classes in Social Science hall with the windows open and a 'bunch of cars trailing up and down that street. The noise from the street at times gi ts eo loud that students (-annul hear a word the professor says. Whether there is a way to stop this nuisance without closing up the street is doubtful. It seems almost impos sible for the university to stop traffic ihrough the campus there. But some thing should be done to relieve the strain on professors and students. Drivers of cars on Twelfth street are mostly university students. Few of them make any undue noise in traver sing Twelfth street. The loud rattling and banging come mostly from com mercikl traffic, delivery boys who make Twelfth street a short cut, trucksters who have no regard for persons In the class rooms, Use of Twelfth street could be stopped to litis kind of traffic. Stopping of commercial traffic on Twelfth would be a great help. Twelfth street is not essential to the pursuit of Lincoln city trade but it !s essential to the university, both as a parking "BE A GOOD SPORT, COM E ON" "Be a good sport, come on." And the young man who, being clean of heart, had been holding back, fin ally swung into line and marched .twav with other young men who were not clean of heart, all because he couldn't resist the incessant urging. That night a wine cellar was robbed and until early morning there was carousal. Two nights later a stpre was robbed. The young man who once had a clean heart was implicated. He was not with the others, but later accepted stolen articles. Weeks later he was tried and con victed because he acknowledged his guilt. It was his first offense, but the law made him a party to the crime after the fact. He refused to say from whom he received the stolen articles, but admitted they had been stolen. Of the four young men he was the only one to suffer. A little later Number Blank entered the penitentiary to serve a minimum sentence of one year! Thus. "Be a sport. Come on," had done its work had branded a clean young man a thief. Tile world is full of "be a sport" fellows. They all perhaps were once as clean as the young man in mind, who accepted stolen articles. They were tempted, aas he was. "Being a sport" and falling in line has cost many a young man his liberty. It has broken hearts dragged down to the depths many a young man whose pros pects were once bright. The young man who wins in these days of strenuous life is the one who can say "No," and stick to it. Inno cent sport is far different from "being a sport" as interpreted by crooks or young men standing on the border of a criminal career. No real happiness ever comes thru being other than square. No one should ever be afraid of ridicule and fear to say "No," when tempted. Omaha World-Herald. CHADDERDON QUITS UNIVERSITY POSITION Will Leave Nebraska August 1 Enter Winner, S. D., Bank Sel leck Takes Job. to Neil T. Chadderdon, for the last three years agent of student activities and recently appointed to handle the business end of the work in the ath letic office, lias resigned his position with the University of Nebraska to enter a bank at Winner, S. D. The. registration is effective starting on August 1. J. K. Selleck. assistant purchasing agent of the university, will succeed Chadderdon as agent of student activ ities and business manager of the ath letic department. Chadderdon was instrumental in se curing the single pavment season ath letic ticket which was tried at Ne braska for the first time this las' year. lie conducted the campaign to sell the tickets which netted a total of nearly ,3000 tickets. PLAY TENNIS! KEEP IN PHYSICAL TRIM f3 jilt; Spalding Equipment Assuroj you of die Highest Qynlity Pos. Sll'lc. Tennis Radcets, Balls, Nets, Shoes, Etc. 8-n. f.tr O.ir New CutuWoc A. G. SPALDING & BROS 211 So. State St., Chicago, m." A Cleaning Service That Satisfies IT'LL PAY YOU TO TRY IT. BE NEAT I Phone B2301 CITY CLEANING and DYE WORKS Return Postage Paid 1605 "0" H. RAYMER, Pres. W. 0. CARLSON, Mgr. WHERE THEY ARE HAT THEY DO The marriage of Miss Velma Mary Hall to Paul West of Norfolk, was held Wednesday evening, June 28, at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Hall, 313 R street, Uni versity Place. Both the bride and groom are graduates of the Univer sity of Nebraska and members of the Dellan Literary Society. Mr. West is a member of Phi Beta Kappa and Phi Delta Kappa. Mr. and Mrs. West will osososoooooooooooooioooseooosceooooeocooeocoocoo9oco 8 NOW IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY D to have TOWNSEND make your PHOTOGRAPHS STUDIO 226 So. 11th St. ' S "PRESERVE THE PRESENT FOR THE FUTURE" ooooeosoeoooooooooooooooooosoGoosoGooooooooooooooeo 1130 "O" Private Booths and Rooms "The Place Different" PEKIN CAFE Served at All Hours Look for the Pekin Sign Upstairs