The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, May 26, 1926, Page 3, Image 3

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    TUB DAILY NBBRA SKAN
y0u will enjoy living in this
house. Fourteen large, airy
rooms, ten bedrooms, sleeping
porch, three baths. If you are
looking for a home for next fall
call B-2690. We will be glad
to show you several desirable
houses.
Harvey Rathbone
Company
118 North 11th St. B2690
EAT
at
The Lktl Sunshine Cafe
Meals, Sandwich! mni
Lunches
QUICK SERVICE
First Door East of Temple
SALEM'S
"The Heme of Real
Malted Milks"
TRY SALEM'S CREAM WAF
FLES. CANDIES ana SODAS
H47 O Street
B4589
Psychology.
The department of philosophy
wifihos to call attention to tho change
In Thilosophy 100 (Introductory
Psychology), heretofore given aa a
five-hour course each semester,
which 11 be given, beginning Sep
tember 1920. as a three-hour course.
Philosophy 101, and continued the
second semester as Philosophy 102.
185. History and Principles
Freshman English
Students who have C's or Vn re
corded against them in Freshman
English under Mr. Stepanek may dis
charge their delinquency by passing
Bie general examination Friday. May
48, at 8 a. m., in Law 101, 104, 107,
and 202.
Cornhusker Bills
Organizations which have snace in
the Cornhusker and have not paid
their bills should make arrangements
to do so at once.
Representatives of Swift and Com-
Springtime
is
UKE TIME
LARGE ASSORTMENT
OF UKELELES
Ranging from 2.50 to
15.00 each
SCHAEFER & SON
1210 O ST.
The
Davis Coffee
Shop
108 No. 13th St.
Featuring
Teeatsd Breed Bsaewtahes. Colekea
Fies. The Best of Pastry and Unas
celled Coffee.
Open Dsr end Night Students
Lincoln
ALL
THIS
WEEK
"TOUND UP WEEK PROGRAM
Greater Then the Stage Play the
Greatest Football Picture
Ever Made
0PNH
A Metro-Goldwyn Picture
With an AU Star Cast Jack Pick
lord Mary Brian Mary Aid. a
Francis X. Bushman. Jr.
Win. Halnes(asomJBrown)
..crtNra rc mrf AND"
Special Synchronized Music
A Beautiful Musical Treat
ON THE STAGE
Margaret Curry Mary Coyle
THE TWO CLEVER KIDS
Late of the
"STUDENT PRINCE CO."
Assisted by
IVAN M"CORMACK
NEWS FABLES REVIEW
LinLULD 9 I mr nvt-.
Jean L. Schaefer, Cond.
Wilbur Chsnoweth, Organist
SHOWS AT 1. 3, B, 7, 9.
MAT. 35c NITE 50 CHILD. 10c
The University of Nebraska
Official Daily Bulletin
VOL. I.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 1926.
NO. 60.
pany will be here Wednesday, May
26, to meet Juniors and Seniors in
Prof. Bullock's office, S. S. 806,
from 10:30 to 12 and from 1:30 to
4 o'clock.
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
Tassels
All Tassels must be at the Field
House Saturday, May 29, at 10 a.
m. All must be in uniform.
Da Molay
Lincoln Chapter Order of De Mo
lay will meet at the Scottish Rite
Temple tonight at 7:45 o'clock. Band
and Patrol meet at 7 o'clock. Both
the Initiatory and De Molay degree
will be exemplified to a class of
about twenty candidates.
Lutherans
The Lutheran Bible League will
hold a business meeting and election
of officers Wednesday at 7 p. m. in
Faculty Hall.
iwill bo held during tho evening.
Tho Carnival of Fun will bo in full
urW wiin tha doors oncn at 7:30
and will continuo with characteristic
curnivul pep until 11:30.
Announce Alumni
Officers Saturday
(Continued rrom Page One)
six districts of the state are as fol
lows: first district, Otto Kotouc, '02,
Humboldt, and Mrs. Marguerite Dye
Foreman, '16, Alvo. Second dis
trict, Lloyd W. Charlesworth, 'IB,
Omaha, and Karl C. Brown, '19, Pa-
pillion. Third district, Edward Hu
waldt, '13, and Walter It. Raecke,
17. Central City. Fourth district,
Miss Josephine Shramek, '24, David
City and Mrs. Edna Hess, '18, He
bron. Fifth district, Cloyd L. Stew
art, '15, Clay Center and Harry Par
ker, ex-04 Hastings. Sixth dis
trict, Mrs. Genevieve Welsh Irwin,
'17, Bridgeport, and Mrs. Clifford B.
Scott, ex-'20, O'Neill.
Plans for Intra-Mural
Athletics Are Made
(Contmued from Page One)
next year. On a limited scale, in
door baseball in inter-class, inter
college and inter-organiation will
be held. Bowling, which has been
sponsored by down-town firms, will
be taken over by the University. The
tournaments, which will probably be
limited to the fraternities, will be
held at the down-town alleys. It is
hoped that soon the Field will be
equipped with alleys, as there is suf
ficient room.
Indoor track and field contests will
of course be held both in the winter
season inside, and in the spring, out
side. This has attracted much in
terest from the students, as it has
offered more chances for the lesser
lights in the athletic field than the
other sports.
Wrestling tourneys will be held
again next year. An addition, as in
most of the other sports, will be the
inter-college and inter-organization
tills. The individual men will as be
fore strive for single honors.
Expect More New Men Out
The spring promises to see a great
er number of men competing in ath
letics. Baseball, which this year was
extended over that of last, except
that there was no Varsity team, will
include even more than the present
season. The college teams will be
placed in one league, and the or
ganizations in another. The mter
organization league will Lave two
divisions, the fraternity and the in
terfrater'hity groups. All the base
ball contests will be run in leagues,
which broadens the number of games
in which the teams may play.
Track will probably call out the
largest number of aspirants. The
tri-color and individual meets will be
held as during the past season. The
interfraternity meet, which has been
run off, will be improved upon. This
will be by a graduated scoring meth
od. It is thought that an interfra
ternity relay meet will be new event
but this is not definite. The col
leges will have a meet, and the cham
pions chosen will be by competition.
Tennis, which seemed popular this
... . a . 1.
season, will De conducted on mucn
the same manner as the others. Inter-college
and inter-fraternity tour
neys will be additions. The individ
ual meets will attract much of at
tention. Horse-shoe meets will be held ex
tensively. The "barnyard golf" art
ists from the colleges and the or
ganizations will compete for honors.
The individuals will have an event,
which will probably be the most im
portant of all the horse-shoe pitching
tourneys.
Carnival Prizes
Now On Display
(Continued From rage One)
with the new carnival properties. All
the oriental mysteries of the east
will be found in these shows. "The
Streets of Cairo" will cover the north
west end .of the big Field House.
Fortune telling, dancing girls, ma
gicians and other wierd acts will be
found in this unique part of the Car
nival of Fun.
Twice during the evening the in
habitants of these side-shows will
stage a parade. One procession will
be in the early part of the evening
and the other will be held toward the
end. The balcony of the Field
House will be a splendid place from
which to view this and other events
during the evening.
The winning company in the com
petitive drill held in the afternoon
in the stadium will parade with their
ladies in a grand military march.
This will be the compnay to which
the Omaha Cup will have been given
at the end of the competitive drill
on the field.
The Pershing Rifles will give a
five-minute drill. Individual compet
Give Extracts 'from
Innocents' Constitution
(Continues from Page One)
names shall bo selected from this
list for the Tentative List and their
method of selection shall be as fol
lows: Each active member shall bal
lot on thirty names, the same name
not to appear more than once on any
one ballot Each voting member
shall place these thirty names on his
ballot in the order of his preference.
Each nominee shall be credited with
the same number .of points on each
ballot as his relative position on
each ballot indicates, (e. g. The
first namo on a ballot shall bo credit
ed with one point; tho thirtieth
name Bhall be credited with thirty
points. ) Each failure to appear
on a ballot shall count thirty-one
points. Tho total number of points
received by each nomineo on this
basis on tho thirteen ballots shall be
divided by tho actual number of
timeH his name has appeared on a
ballot. Tho thirty cligiblo men re
ceiving tho lowest number of points
in tho manner indicated shall con
stitute the Tentative Xist."
The Final Election
"Tho thirteen Innocents-elect shall
bo selected in precisely the same
manner with the exception that each
active member Bhall ballot for thir
teen men, placing them on his ballot
in the order of his preference. As
before, each nominee will bo credited
with tho same number of points on
each ballot as his position on that
ballot indicates. Each failure to
appear on a ballot Bhall count four-
ten points. Tho total number of
points received by each nominee on
this basis on thirteen ballots shall be
divided by the actual number of
times his namo has appeared on a
ballot. The thirteen men receiving
in order the lowest number of points
in tho manner indicated shall be de
clared tho members-elect for the
coming year."
Suspension of Rules
"These provisions either in whole
or in part may not be repealed or
temporarily suspended at any time
except by the unanimous vote of the
thirteen active members and the two
duly elected and qualified advisors."
THE MILWAUKEE DELICATESSEN
1619 O St.
Everything for the Ticnic Party and Dutch Lunch.
Open evenings and Sunday until Midnite
LYRIC
ALL
THW WUK
A Dslichtful and Thrilling Comedr
Drama
Rod La Rocque
In a Superb Mystery Story
"Bachelor Brides"
"Rah, Rah,
Heidelberg"
A New Van Bibber Comedy
NEWS AND TOPICAL FEATURES
On the Stage
Three Abbey Sisters
H .rrrvm f Voc 1 1 its
SHOWS AT I, 3. S. 1,
COLONIAL
THREE DAYS ONLY
A Stirring tale of love, hate end Jus
tice in the cattle country
rata a. kynes
CBQKCOBRIEN
AM1TASHWI
"TheBar-C
Mystery"
News end Comedy Pictures
SHOW5AT 173. S, 7, 9.
MON. B
TUES.
WED.
-issssrse. H
B
J i
Rialto Theater
OUNDPERORAM
A Masterpiece m Human Emotion
IBANEZ'
TORRENT
With RICARDO CORTEZ
end GRE1A GARBO
A Motro-Goldwyn Picture
CLYDE COOK In
"Whit'i the WorldComlnr "To
N EWS-TOPICS TRAVEL
RiBWiumVianrM.TJttle
Organists
SHOWS AT 1. 3, 5, 7. 9.
MAT. 25c NITE 38c CHILD. 1
When the baseball nine wore whiskers,
and "Mob the Umpire" was the
national college yell, Anheuser-Busch
was nationally known among good
fellows.
And now, when we laugh if we win
and grin if we lose, and umpires need
no bodyguards,
BUSCH.
(A-B)
PALE DRJY
is the favored drink of college men,
because, like the college man, Busch
Pale Dry is a good mixer everywhere
and every time.
Take Advantage
of
Crested Stationery
at $1.00 a box
University Seal Stationery at 50c a box
(Subject to stock on hand)
SPECIAL FOR TWO WEEKS!
Graves Printing Co.
Something new and
appetizing for hot weather.
Come in and see
for yourself.
14th and O
B1540
Attend The First Big Party of
Round-up Week
College Night
at
Capitol Beach Park
THURSDAY NITE, MAY 27, 1926.
Capitol Beach especially invites the Alumni
and Students of the University of Nebraska.
Dancing on the new maple floor to the
matchless music of BECK'S ORCHESTRA
playing in a shell of gold.
Anheuser Busch SiLouis
LINCOLN BOTTLING CO.
Distributor Lincoln, Neb.
Special Purchase
Silk Dresses
THRU cooperation of manufacturers and a group of buyers from a
number of great stores extending across the continent we are
able to make very advantageous purchases and to offer beautiful
dresses at prices much less than you would expect to pay for them.
ONE LOT OF TAILORED AND SEMI-DRESS STYLES
Here are tub silks, georgettes, dotted crepes, flat crepes,
crene de chine, end-to-end crepe Georgette and lace in
smartly styled frocks for almost any occasion which sum
mer may bring. Straight line frocks in one and two piece
styles, cape models, bouyant frocks with circular skirts,
onriota and flares. Bolero stvles. In fact a splendid lot
of well made dresses of good materials. SIZES 16 to 44.
PRICED,
ANOTHER LOT of DRESSES for ALL OCCASIONS
Sheer cool georgettes in light and dark colorings, Batik
printed crepes, dotted crepes, tailored flat crepes, crepe de
chine, Dunwoodie crepes, etc. Cape back models, two piece
styles, straight line dresses for sports and street. Some have
the smart jabots, etc. SIZES 16 to 46. PRICED,
$1Q
Second Floor.
gram ''lift mjii uiMiuaiUL 'nMiiw'E
J