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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (May 16, 1923)
ill Jll'i! 1-y JIIE DAILY NEBBASKAN IS ' i i ,f t The Daily Nebraskan I'ntilishtul fcmulii.v, Tui8ilny, Wednesday, Thursday ami Krlilii.v inirninir of each wwk lillie lnlveiHlty of Nebraska. Accepted for milium,' t aiMM-lnl rate or poalace provided for in Section 111M. Act of October a, 1IHI7, nut liorlw.nl Janwiry -o, 1UL"-'. OK KICI A I. IMVKKSITV VI UL1CATION Under llif IMreetlon f t Kludwit 1 ub Mention llourd. Kntered n b Hoi-oml-cliisg mutter at the poKlot'flce in Lincoln. Nebraska, under tue Act of Coin-TeHo. Mnrdi 3, liSTO. SubHiTlptlon rat i-00 year fl.W a nemeNter BHmle ropy Flv rl"u Address nil eoinmiincntlons to TIIH l.H.Y NKKKASKAN Stiitloli A, Lincoln, Nt'b. TKI.F.rilONKS inlverhlty Hi. KveiilnirM 1I8K2 Kdltortnl mid l iiHlnosrt offices In south west corner of l.iisement of tlto Admlnis trntlon Hull. Herbert Hrowwll. Jr -. Kdltor Mnrjorle W.vnom Mumming Kdltol Helen Kiimmtr Anhoi-IiiI Kjlor fharlc A. .Mllebell NIM h. or Howard IH.ffett NW't r Kmn.ett V. M.uin ...Muht KtlHor Cliuunery Kinney Itn)ne Muimaer Clifford M. HlekN An!. Ilimlnww Mitr. Clureiiee Kleklioff Circulation Mummer OKFK'K HOIKS. Editor. 4-5 dally. Miiiniplnc Kditur. .1-0 dally. HiisImohs Milliliter. 4-fl dally. F THIS ISSl'K. F.mmett V. Maun 'ld't Kdltor Flan to stay for commencement. The whole program for the Corn husker Roundup is completed and re ports of it have been sent to the thousands of Nebraska alumni and ex Ftudents. Too often undergraduates do not read the part of the program which follows Ivy Day, organization banquets, and the commencement baseball frame. They do not plan to stay for the splendid Sunday program and for the commencement address and exercises. The commencement address and ex ercises will be especially worth-whil this sprintr. They form the climax of the entire Roundup celebration. All students who want to become well acquainted with Nebraska traditions will plan to stay for commencement. practically all his time reading de tective stories, the scandal sheets of the newspapers, and books that have been suppressed is doing himself a great deal of harm. There is a dan ger that the reader will take such material too seriously. It is neces sary to examine light fiction with a critical eye. The ideal reader con centrates on the best worsk in the field of literature, but he keeps be fore him the ever present aim of im proving his education by reading upon a variety of subjects. There is an ever Increasing ten dency on the part of students to ig nore the best literary works' for ab solute trash. The fault lie3 in the home training and secondary school education which the student receives before coming to college. The desir ability of appreciating fine writing is under emphasis by him. The stu dent of today must realize that while lighter fiction may be read occasion ally, it should not comprise the basis for an education. Michigan Daily. Notices While the whole University wil await with interest the speech to be given here Saturday by President Meiklejohn of Amherst, students and faculty members of the College of Arts and Sciences will be expecially anxious to hear the noted educator. Saturday might well be designated Arts and Sciences Day and students of that college will do well to make an extra effort to hear the address of the eastern president. President Meiklejohn will come as the Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi orator, thus recognizing the honorary national Arts and Sciences organizations. With Dean Phi'.o Buck recently returned to take active charge of the college af fairs, the mother college may set aside Saturday as one to review the purposes for which it was established and the ideals toward which it is con stantly striving. The plan to strictly limit the num ber of "closed nights'' during the next school year has some real advantages and yet the door should not be too closely shut. No doubt there have been times when nights have been barred unjustly to all except one student activity. The student body is too large to be accommodated at many of these functions. The abolishing of these "closed nights" is to be com mended. But there are a few Uni versity customs and traditions which should be continued with a doubt. The general opinion may be that if these cannot live without having a "closed night" set aside for them, they are not popular with the students and there fore do not need to be continued. But there are always hundreds of students each year who have had no opportun ity to become acquainted with these customs and who do not realize their importance to the school. Let the new rule operate, then, to uphold these customs and traditions even at the expense of a liberal interpretation of its purpose. (Notices of general interest will b nrlnteil In this column for two conseeu tlve days. Copy should be In the re liraskan office by rive oe.oct.. Girls' Commercial Club. Girls' Commercial Club banquet at the Woodburn, 425 So. 14, Thursday at 6:15. All Bizad girls invited. Tick ets $1.15. Math Club The last Math Club meeting of the year postponed from Wednesday last will be held on Wednesday, May 1G, at 2:30 p. m. in the main lecture room of Brace Laboratory. Professor Candy will give an illustrated lecture on th "Hutnrv of the Ten Diirits". A dis- J cussion for the plans of next year will be held afterwards. Gamma Lambda. Gamma Lambda meeting at Silver Lynx house 7:30 p. m. Class Relay Team Tryouts Tryouts for the girls' Class relay teams will be held in the gymnasium Wednesday, May 1C. at noon. Nu-Med Meeting of the Nu Meds in Bessey Hall at 5 o'clock Thursday. Special business. R. O. T. C. Camp Dinner for all camp men will be held at the Roberts' Dairy Lunch Wednesday evening, May 16, at G:30. Tickets, 50c. Band All members of the Band wiii sneet at the Temple Thursday morning at 8:30 to accompany the seniors on their picnic to Crete. Application for appointment to the staff of The Daily Nebraskan for the first semester, 1923-1924, should be submitted not later than Friday, May 18. Application blanks may be got at the Student Activities office. The positions to be filled are: editor, managing editor, associate editor, night editor (three); busi ness manager, assistant manager and circulation manager. M. M. FOGG, Acting Chairman, University Publication Board. The art of correct reading is some thing which any student should be more than glad to acquire. A major ity of college students do not make the most of their reading opportum ties; they spend many hours thumbing the pages of the latest short story magazines, special preference always being given to the magazine that runs the worst trash in its columns. On the other hand, there is the college grind, a somewhat rare specimen these davs, who devotes his spare reading time to a perusal of the weightiest articles on file in the li brary with never a thought of adding a trace of variety to his education by reading a throbbing novel of the Ca nadian northwest. Even with the ardous scholars who read the long dry passages of the standard works, there must at times be a craving for a short snappy story. No special harm can come from read ing a red hot story right off the press provided it is not taken seriously; people need a little something to add zest to the monotony of their exist ence. Still, the person who spends Calendar BIZAD GIRLS TO CLOSE YEAR WITH BANQUET Commercial Club Will Conclude Activities at Final Dinner Thursday Evening. A banquet for all girls of the Busi ness Administration college will be given by the Girls' Commercial Club Thursday, May 17, at the Woodburn, 425 South Fourteenth street. Tickets may be secured from Mildred Pol nicky, B1025. Guests are requested to arrive at G o'clock in order that the dinner may begin promptly at 6:15. Ruth Small, retiring president of the club, will act as toast mistress. The toast list has been carefully ar ranged, and the committee promises responses of general interest. Dean and Mrs. J. E. LeRossignol will be honor guests of the club. The banquet will conclude activities of the club for the year. This is the second year for the Girls' Commercial Club, and material advancement has been made in accomplishing its pur pose of fostering friendship ?nd co operation among the girls in the Col lege of Business Administration. Monthly dinners have been held at Ellen Smith Hall under the direction of Mary Lococo. Several business women have talked before the club during the year. Membership has in creased with the growing interest in the program it offers. A modern things he is roughing it when he strolls in the park without his stick and gloves. The wires tell of an old ship that came with a heavy list of port. Prob ably a sucker list. GARDNER ELECTED TO N CLOD PRESIDENCY Officers for Coming Year Are Chosen at Luncheon for Letter Men. At a meeting of the N club at the Chamber of Commerce Tuesday noon, Maurice Gardner was elected presi dent for the coming year. Other of ficers elected are: Dave Noble, vice president; Howard Turner, secretary and treasurer; Joe Pizer, sergeant-at-arms. The N club is composed of men in the University of Nebraska who have won a letter in any one of ' - sports. It has become a very activ i niza tion on the campus, promoting the various athletic events during the school year. It has charge of the high school basketball tournament, the interfraternity events, and the state high school track meet. This year the N club is publishing the Tales of the Cornhuskers, the year-book of Corn husker athletics. Each man in the club appoints himself as a committee of one to see that all the promising athletes in the state come to the Uni versity of Nebraska. Another good way to pass the spring exams with flying colors is to be a .400 hitter. You can tell the age of a tree by the rings and the age of a govern ment by its wrongs. OUTSIDE FOUNTAIN SERVICE Rector's Pharmacy 13th and P "Drive Up to Our Curb" WANTED Man to Enter Advertising Agency Business If you are interested in enter ing the advertising business here is your opportunity. On June loth the Buchanan Thomas Advertising Co., of Oma ha, will have an opening for a Nebraska man leaving school this year. The man we select for this po sition need have no previous ad vertising experience. We are look ing for good raw material a man to come with us and learn the business from the ground up. Mr. Buchanan and Mr. Thomas will meet applicants on the mez zanine, (north side) at the Lin coln Hotel next Saturday at 2 p. m. We will be pleased to' meet everyone interested at this time and go into further details. This is a splendid opportunity. There is a great future for you in the advertising business. YOUR PAY CHECK reflects a combination of Native Ability, Expert Training and Practical Experience. You furnish the first. We give you the second, and You acquire the third, after we have placed you in a good position. N. S. B. Training Pays. SUMMER QUARTER OPENS JUNE 4 NEBRASKA SCHOOL OF BUSINESS T. A. Blakeslee, A. B., Ph.B., President Approved by State Superintendent of Public Instruction. Accredited by American Association of Vocational Schools Cor. O and 14th Lincoln, Nebr. Wednesday, May 16. W. A. A. Board meeting, Armory, noon. Friday, May 18 Delta Omicron party, Ellen Smith Hall, 8:30. Phi Delta Chi, house dance. Palladian Crete picnic. Phi Delta Theta house dance. Acacia lance, Crete. Satuirdiy, May 19. Alpha Delta Pi Founders' Day ban- uuet. Lincoln. Alpha Chi Omega, dinner-dance, chapter house. Kappa Phi Mothers' day, Ellen Smith hall. Kappa Alpha Theta dance, K. C hall. Omega Zeta Pi dance, Ellen Smith hall. Phi Mu house dance. Phi Tau Epsilon house dance. A PLEASANT REMEMBRANCE at all times YOUR PHOTOGRAPH A Photo by Dole Petting parties are not new, Cleo patra was one. Y'ou can't always tell. Tightwads never get tight. Give a man enough rope and he will hang himself or smoke himself to death. SENIORS I Get the highest salary and the posi tion you want as a teacher. Open ings in all States. Ask for free en rollment blank and list of Nebraska graduates placed by us. SPECIALISTS' EDUCATIONAL BUREAU Odecn Bids. St. Louis, Mo. s H H i Work in which your college career counts Choose a life-work in which all you have learned will count where you will continue to learn through association with men of high calibre where your education will be an aid in meeting men. Enter the insurance profession. Insurance Fire, Marine and Casualty places you at once in touch with big business men. Not only will all you have learned be an asset but you will be daily increasing your education along economic and industrial lines. The Insurance business makes big men. Choose Insurance as your life-work. The Insurance Company of North America is a national, historical institution founded in 1792 with over a century and a quarter of well earned prestige. Conservative policies and de pendable service have been .responsible for the growth and for the constructive activities of the Company in the development of the entire insurance profession. Insurance Company of North America PHILADELPHIA and the Indemnity Insurance Company of North America write practically every form of insurance except life. "Nothing to worry about tonight she won't hear me in these new Forbush Oxfords!" $10 and $11 . the house' tjf Kijipmheirnvr tniodciniies I II t 1 IS m CRAVATS: A reversible long-wearing tie HERE is a tie that appeals at once to your sense of economy and to your lik ing for attractive neckwear. Its pattern is just conserva tive enough to make it universally serviceable, and its colorings mark it as a cravat ideal for summer wear. It's only one of many pop ular Cheney designs that your haberdasher will be glad to show you. Look at them today. Sold by Farquhar, Speier & Simon, Mayer Bros., Rudge & Guenzel, Magee's, Armstrong Clothing Co., and Gold & Co. pucker - ghean 1123 0 STREET. Complete Supplies for All Departments of the University. EnjoiJ thirst- between dances Jf Delicious and Refreshing ' ' The Coca-Cola Co.. Atlanta, G- Y