epfjjBfijiEljffl- LEARN TO DANCE tfn. Luella a WUH.me will luck rou Amncm private lessons. Phone for appointment Phen B 42GS Studio 1120 D THE DAVIS SCHOOL SERVICE We Place Teachers Xnrallmtntt BuOtolJed 18S No. 11th St. Orer Idyl Hour Cafe THE DAILY NKBRASKAN The University of Nebraska Official Daily Bulletin VOL. I. THURSDAY, MAY 13, 1020. NO. 61. Lincoln ALL THIS WEEK Lauine Cafe Thrill With DOUGLAS MACLEAN IN "That' My Baby" A Paramount Plctur on'the STAGE Orvllla Andrawa and Bed Krauta A Noval Sons Ravlaw Tha Figures Coma Off tha Scraan Extra Addad Attractions "THE LURE OF CADDYING" For All Coll Players "BOY SCOUTS" Plcturaa ol tha 2t Boy Scouta Who Racalvad Eafla Badgaa In Kanaaa City NEWS FABLES LINCOLN SYMPHONY Wilbur Chanowath, OrfanUt SHOWS AT I, 3, S. 7. 8. MAT JSc NIT E SOo CHILD 10c LYRIC ALL THIS WKEK WELCOME LIONS You'va Navar Sean Anything Truer Mora Human, Mora Appealing Than "THE SAP" with a aplendld caat Including KENNETH HARLAN AND MARY MCALISTER "Mr. Cinderella" A Whirlwind of Laughter VISUALIZED NEWS On tha Stage Johnny Yula and Mia Rlcharda In Songs, Dance and Music SHOWS AT 1, 3, S, 7, 9 MISCELLANEOUS NOTICES Teacher College There will bo a picnic for all of the Teachers College Freshmen Mon day, May 17. Tickets will be sold at T. C. 307 at the price of 35 cents. Essay Contest ah persons entering the EsBoy Contest must have their poemB or essays completed and handed In not later than Saturday, May 15. No poems or essays will be accepted af ter that date. R. O. T. C. There will be a dinner at tho Grand Hotel for all men going to Camp this summer on Wednesday. May 18 at 6 o'clock. All those who plan to attend camp should be there. STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS Delta Omicron There will be an Initiation of the Delta Omicron Thursday, at -7:15 at the home of Jeanette Olson, 1415 South 10. Classical Club The Classical Club will have a special tea next Saturday at 3 o' clock. Mr. Mark Levinar will eive Demonstration of Etching. Corn Cob Corn Cob Initiation for the second semester will be hold Fridny, May 14. Math Club. There will be a meeting of the Math Club Thursday, May 13, at 7:30 in the Social Science 101. Miss Luke will speak on Graphical Con struction. Cosmopolitan Club. Cosmopolitan club dinner at Grand hotel Sunday at 12:30 sharp. "N" Men Every 'N' man must bo at tho Ar mory at 8 o'clock Sunday morning for tho picnic. Those with available cars report to the . hletic office be fore Saturduy. Secretary, N Club. N. E. S. Business meeting of Nebraska En gineeriiiT Society in M. E. 200 at 10 o'clock P Iduy morning. Art Club. Art Club will elect officers for the coming year at a regular meeting to be held in the art gallery at 6 o'clock today. Palladian. There will bo no meeting of the Palladian Society this Friday. The annual Crete picnic of the society will be held Saturday, May 15. NEW COURSE IN HOME EG Four Year Combination of Home Economic! and Lib eral Art Planned Trumbull Discusses Student Employment (Continued from Page One) Rialto Theater ALL THIS WEEK One Picture You'll Never Forget "THE RECKLESS LADY" A First National Pictuse With an All Star Cast "WHO EMMA" Featuring Jimmie Adama NEWS TOPICS TRAVEL SHOWS AT 1, 3, S. 7, O MAT 25c NITE 3Sc CHILD 10c COLONIAL ALL THIS WEEK WELCOME LIONS BIG DOUBLE BILL WILLIAM S. HART In Hi Latest Success 'Tumbleweeds" A Stirring Tale of tha West Charlie Chaplin In Hi Greatest Laugh Sucres "A DOG'S LIFE" World's News and Topical Picture SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 8 iERE EVERYBODY- GOts THURv FR1. SAT. BENSON & MASSINO COMPANY and MARION BAWN In THE SUPER NOVELTY" BILLY FARRELL & CO. assisted by HIS DAD LIDE GARDNER A NANCY REED In "NOVELTY SURPRISES" WM. DESMOND & CO. THE DUDE BANDIT" Pasqualio Amata Wm. Desmond Stella Wilkin Mary Maclvor Bob .........Jerome Sheldon Pedro ...Geo. E. Hardy CLAUDIA COLEMAN 'Types of Women" TO BE ANNOUNCED FOX NEWS "THE RADIO DETECTIVE" Third Chapter HELP WANTED" A New Comedy SHOWS AT 2:30, 7:00, 9:00 ORPHEUM A Gorgeous Spectacle You Will Never Forget AU This Week I WELCOME LIONS QjjcT Vams SHOWS AT 1:00, 3:00. 8:00, 9:00 ADULTS 25e CHILD 10c a small number to be sure. Some were disappointed in not finding work immediately, others had to leave for the same reason. These circumstances are inevitable and al together natural. With so large an influx of students looking for work within the short period of two weeks there is bound to be a surplus of men for the job available. This surplus continues for the first few months. As the year progresses students, working themselves into different positions, are gradually absorbed. "The employment situation in the fall might well be compared with a heavy rainfall. In the case of the latter the ground is unable to absorb it all and some of it runs off. Like wise, the down-pour of students de siring work in the fall is so heavy that some of them are certain not to be asorbed. But the student who cornea here with a good reserve of available cash and does not let that fact slow up his efforts to get a job will invariably pull through the year and be successful in getting work. For this reason I advocate that the prospective working student create as large a cash reserve as he can be fore coming to Lincoln so that he can survive the first. He will be here ready to grasp the opportunity when it appears. Hardest For Freshmen "The first year man has, of course, the hardest time in getting located. First of all he is unacquainted with his new environment; he is forced to go through a mental readjustment- Secondly, he bas usually no connec tions in Lincoln where he can get ad vice or be directed to a possible open ing. Thirdly, Juniors and Seniors in school, older men with more experi ence, offer stiff competition for men just out of high school. The older men oftentimes hold their job from year to year, perhaps throughout the time they are in college. "I would say that the first year for men in college is their test year. If they survive that one they can sur vive the remaining years required by their course. The hard thing to do is to get established, to get a job. Once they do get one they will have little difficulty in getting others if they do their work properly. That is where we come in. We consider that our most important function is not to run up a large amount earned nor to exceed all others in the num ber of positions filled, but to take the new and inexperienced students who need to earn all or part of their expenses and help them get started right, and to equip them so that they may obtain the greatest possible re turns for their services. Cannot Guarantee Job "We cannot guarantee men jobs, nor can we set any date at which time we will get them one. We al ways tell men to come in as often as they feel inclined to, between class es, going to or from classes, a dozen . .... ... - 1 1 times a day U tney want to. aua come in from employers at all hours of the day and the employer invar iably wants someone right away. "Speaking generally, I believe tnat the practical experience that stu dents have before coming to the uni versity is on the increase. This some times results from necessity of work ing while in high school. Often this experience is gained for the express purpose of helping them through col lege. Regardless of the reasir. it ii a good thing for one who contem plates working his way through col lege to get all the practical experi ence he can before he tries it "I would like to stress the fact that students must cultivate and ex ercise dependability. Student work ers must, of necessity, do their work at odd hours during the day when they do not have classes. This means that jobs are not always finished the same day they are begun. What the working student should do is to go back of his own volition and finish it JnU Mnlra Once you have Degun a jou ments for its completion. The em ployment bureau cannot afford to consider men for jobs who will not do this. Student Must Be Responsible "It is up to the student worker to prove that he is reliable and that he can take responsibility and shoulder it. Once this is proven the other dis advantages will vanish. Ability to shoulder and carry responsibility is what employers everywhere seek in their employees. The continuance of our service depends upon the st dents showing that they are men of that calibre. One student who prov- .... - a es himself unworthy can do more harm to the working student body as a whole than the good done by ten men, who work conscientiously. "A man managing a business has to look entirely at the business side of the proposition. His overhead must be sufficiently small to allow him to meet competition and yet re alize profit. He cannot, therefore, afford to be very philanthropic, which means that a student to meet the competition for jobs, is going to have to deliver the goods. Inefficiency Rare "We never recommend a student for a position unless we feel that he is qualified to do the work in a satis factory manner. Cases of ineffi ciency and unreliability among stu dents have been few. Whenever we find a student who is not efficient in one kind of work we try to find something else that be can do more efficiently, and if a student does not care enough for the work to be re liable we drop him from our lists. "I must not pass without a word of appreciation to those who so kind ly lend their aid to this office. To the Lions Club -of Lincoln we owe no small debt of gratitude and thanks. Every fall these men, who have more business of their own than they can take care of, devote an entire afternoon in making a thorough canvass of the whole down town business district, endeavoring to locate all possible openings for stu dents. This gives our fall drive for employment an impetus it could hard ly otherwise obtain. The Daily Ne- braskan, our school paper, and the Lincoln Star and Journal have al ways extended to us any aid we have asked. I can also frankly say that I can not ask for better co-operation from individuals than is given me by the people of the city of Lincoln. They have always proven themselvep mindful of the fact that a large num ber of students are dependent on the work they are able to get to put them through school. I sincerely hope that I will be able to continue to merit their approval and support which is essential to the life of this office." WIDENS WOMEN'S FIELD A new course for homo economics students will be offered in the Col leges of Agriculture next fall, known as a Liberal Course in Home Econ omics. This course has homo econ omics as a foundation and will per mit specialization in other work such as history, languages, music, sociol ogy, or physical education. The course is designed to meet the needs of those students who wish a broad cultural education in linme economics and the liberal arts. The course will not only prcpnre for the vocation of homcmaking, but it will prepare women for a number of oth cr vocations such as: clothing de signers, specialized teachers in foods and nutritions, managers of tea rooms, textile buyers, and extension specialists. These are only a few of the numerous positions open to home economics graduates. The following is a list of the re quirements for each of the four years in the Liberal Course in Home Economics in tho College of Agri culture: Freshman Program. First: Take group 1. Second: Take any one or two of group 2. Third: Complete program from 3 to make 16 hours. 1st S. 2nd S. 1 English 1, 2, 2 2 Physical Education 51, 52 1 1 Home Economics 83 2 2 Botany 3 3 Zoology 3 3 Chemistry 11, 12 .... 4 4 Physics 3 3 3 Home Economics 1, 6, 21, 22 History 1 to 10 3 3 Fine Arts 5, 52 3 3 Language (Ancient or Modern) Sophomore Program English 3 . 3 Science 3-4 3-4 Physical Education 53, 54 1 1 Home Economics 2, 23, or 41, 42 Electives to make 16 hours ( Junior and Senior Program Complete by electives the program of 125 hours, so as to meet the fol lowing total requirements: Home Economics (in at least 3 di visions), 32 hours. Engli'h or English Literature, 10 hours. Science (biological, physical, or chemical), 18 hours. Philosophy, Economics, Sociology, History, (elect in at least 2 depart ments) 15 hours. Psychology, 3 hours. Physical Education, 4 hours. Appreciation courses (music, dra ma, art, literature), 4 hours. Electives, 39 hours. Attempt To Suppress 'The Red Cockatoo' (Continued from Page One.) Cockatoo' and we are solidly behind Miss Moore in her movement to ex pose the weaknesses of tho present social system," said Miss McChesney. Miss Moore regrets that rumors have arisen that the play is a personal experience of an embittered sorority sister. Miss Moore has always been an active and loyal Tri Delt and wc are proud that the committee select ed her play. I believe that every sorority girl should see the play." Dr. Louise Pound, when Interview ed by a representative of Tho No braskan, said: "I heard Miss Moore read 'The Red Cockatoo' before the Coffee Kettle Club of Lincoln at a meeting at the Lincoln Country Club. The ladies liked the play very much indeed they were deeply impressed with it, as she read it. They thought it literary, charming, and subtle. Nor did they interpret it as violent pro paganda of any type." Innocent Refuse Endorsement A request from tho sponsors of the play that tho Innocents pass a reso lution urging tho students to attend was read at the meeting of the so ciety Tuesday evening, but no action was taken. Robert Craig, president of Kosme' Klub, declared, however, that he be lieved plays by students deserved the support and encouragement of all persons interested in theatrical work. He said that the one object of Kosmet Klub was the encouragement of stu dent play-writing, and that all ef forts in this direction should be heartily endorsed. Herbert Yenne, who is directing the rehearsals, refused to comment on the play. Ticket Selling Fait More than 400 seats had been re served at the Ross P. Curtice music store by Wednesday evening, and the management was confident that the play will be greeted by a full bouse. Tho Temple will scat 020 persons, and it will probably be possible to obtain tickets at the door yet this evening. The audience, according to present indications, will be composed almost entirely of University students. Lin coln people, who ordinarily comprise a largo part of tho audionce at Uni versity plays, have not been solicited to buy tickets, it being tho policy before the eyes of the students, Tho Intcrfraternity banquet at the Scottish kite Temple tonight will be over In timo for the fraternity men to see tho show. It is urged that all men planning to attend tha ban quet bo on time, in order that the banquet may start promptly at 6 o'clock. Arret Yale Law Student A Yale law student was the first one arrested as the result or Mew Haven's drive for the enforcement of tho management to bring the play of the "jaywalking" law. PURE THREAD SILK HOSE SPECIAL Come to Tuttle Scott for your White Shoes. We have them High or Low heels in Pumps and One-Strap. $goo 1132 O ST. efflassachusctts Institute of technology School of Chemical Engineering Tradice Individual and practical training tt five Industrial plants art important feature of the Graduate Course in Chemical En gineering Practice. Field work I carried out at Bangor, M ; iioston. iviasa., ana iiunuo, n,i,u plants producing sulphite and soda pulp, paper, caustic soda, chlorine, heavy acid and salts, sugar, coke, gas, steel and other chemical product. The more Important operation! of Chemical Engineering, aa typified by the above processes, are studied systematically by test and experiment on actual plant apparatus, thus fixing in the student's mind the principles of Chemical Engineering and correlating these principle with practice. The work is non-remunerative and Independent of plant control, the whole attention of the students being directed to study and experimentation. Registration ia limited, a student study and experiment In small group and receive individual instruction. Admission requires adequate preparation in chemistry and engineering. Able students can complete the requirements for the Master of Science degree in one and a half years. For further details addrtis tht 6CHOOL e CHEMICAL ENGINEERING PRACTICS Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass. EARLY ENTRIES FOR VALLEY UEDT FILED Crinnell and Oklahoma Lists Received By Athletic Director H. D. Gih up, or offer to make necessary arrange- With the annual Missouri Valley track and field meet which is to be held in the Nebraska Memorial sta dium Friday and Saturday, May 21 and 22, still more than a week away, two schools have already filed their entry lists, with Athletic Director H. D. Gish. The firbt schools to send in their entries were Grinnell and Oklahoma, Included in the Oklahoma entries will be Cox, holder of the Valley javelin record. All the entries are expected to be in by the middle of next week. If the rains are over, the stadium track should be in tho finest shape and ready for a string of record breakers. All the dope points to an unusually fast meet this year. With Locke, Conger, Kimport, Wirsig, Lancaster, Stephens, Richerson, Var Lanningham, Steele, and a host of other stars entered, Nebraska SDort fan3 are assured of some real races. WAR! WAR! WAR! With unflinching bitterness Nebraska's Prize Play of 1926 makes war on the social system of modern colleges. UNIVERSITY PLAYERS present that crushing, stinging, slashing play "THE RED COCKATOO" Intimate, revealing flashes of campus life. A vindictive, ruthless exposure of the social system at its worst TONIGHT ONLY Seats 50c. Reservations at R. P. Curtice Co. Curtain 8:30 Join the crowd of College Folk on the big opening night at CAPITOL BEACH Saturday, May Fifteenth EEEEEIiSMaii BECK'S ENLARGED ORCHESTRA framed in a shell of gold playing scintillating melody. Eight thousand feet of maple floor, newly-laid, finest in the land tTD 4 -ri 4 mm designed for All Sports! For a shoe to meet all sport require ments of collegians, we went to the famous athletic director, Dr. Mean well. In any test, the Athlete will give you comfort and long wear. Quantity production economics permit an exceptional price for a wonderful shoe. Prices: Men's $1.7?; Women's $1.50; Boys' $1.5; Youths' $1.50. Ask your dealer first. If you have to order direct, we will deliver shoes of your sue through the dealer whose name you mention. Exclusive Features IPure crepe gum sole. Same quality as the higher priced Mcan).cll basketball shoes. 2 Orthopaedic heel with arch support. Scientific last which supports instep and foot muscles. 3Stubber tocguards (patent ap plied for) to give utmost protec tion against toe knocks. 4 Specially treated canvas top resists wear and hard usage. Free-Send fat Dr. MmuU' booklet "Tin Making of an AtMes" SPORT SHOES We have an interesting proposition for Dealers, ArMen'c Coaches and Camp Directors. Write for information. THE SERVUS RUBBER COMPANY ROCK ISLAND, ILLINOIS (5 4 The Athlete Carried iri Stock by LAWLOR SPORTING GOODS CO. 9) 1134 N ST. B2021 EJEEiaiaEMiSI Jack Rabbit - Scooters' Mirth - Melody . Caterpiller - Dinty Moore Joy - Laughter $360 REWARD "Plus 'Two iMonths of Sales Training Eeeretf Futltr of Pittwbarg, Kan tarn. Averaged $80.00 u Wk Last Summer Mr. Fuller's attendance . at the Normal College at PlttsburK, Kansas, this year was made possible through the money earned with the "Woman's World subscription sales organi zation last summer. Even during the school year Mr. Fuller has continued with us on a part timo ba sis and pulled down from $25.00 to $30.00 weokly. Needless to say he will be back for full time work at the close of school this summer. OR eight weeks during July and August we offer you an opportunity to put class room theories to the test to acquire under trained sales men a business experience that will be invaluable later on and last, but nowise least, a chance to bring the emaciated bankroll to its former ro bust state. This summer as in previous years, Woman's "World a magazine enter ing 1,325,000 homes monthly invites ambitious college men to enter its subscription sales organization, to work shoulder to shoulder with sea soned veterans, to learn the thrill tjiat comes with getting a prospect's name on the dotted line and to reap the cash rewards that industry and ability invariably bring. The work is dignified, intensely in teresting and keeps you out in the open. No other branch of modern business offers such large or such quick re turn as Ooes the sales de partment. This is a real oppor tunity and we will help you make the grade. A letter or postcard will bring you full details without obligation, to gether with a booklet of letters from other college men in our employ. Write promptly, please, as units are now being filled. Address Mr. P. M. Hinnutn, Director of Sale Woman's World The Magazine of the Middle Wert 107 South Clinton Street, CI ' r- YJ-lnch