I i I; I: t jr.- s. Till: DMI.Y M IMtNSKAN Sl.MlW. Al'ltll. ?. W. 1 If The Daily Nebraskan Station A. Lincoln. Nbrk official truoeNT publication UMVtAtlTV Of Kt BRAIKA Publiar.ee) To.dy. Wadneaday. Thursday. PrlSa humify i.u.ning duxrni Iho atadeiitte ' Under ilaiiliM ot the ud.it FuUi.ialo ' TVVtNTV NINTH VtA d aa ind cli rxatier '.'1,. Lincoln. Kefreiaa. una.r .cl ol . "y" .' and at aixoal rata 0 w.Ui. 'o.ded 1101 H it Otlober 1. HI?. auinorned January at). ISM MCMBCR I J 9 a 1 1 Taai Niw "frww .r -" t4wtM o To ff- iiwitWI. rrfilnrUI OMIro lin'vareily Wall 4 Huti OM.c fn.ly Ha'l ..... OournaU AK lor Nebiaahan oditor. SuBSCFtlFTION nkjt. 12 a yoar SinQio Copy QU ' etmtsiar tOITORIAL Trr . k fditor Gent Pobh tdgar Backut Amocum SdUor k ri K.., M",fl"," la',0r, VV.M.am McCL.ry Robert Ktlty a. al it. N,W' " " W.M,.m O. Taylor Maunro Akin Waoner W,'U p.ni Id.tor timer 8kov . . Coru.bul.na fcd'lere NchoU Margaret Day taui c. Platl Davul Fnnn Ltnar P. SchtcK LaSeilt Gman ..,( . t,"l,", Cordon C. L.r.on Harl N. Anrteraen Harold K. MartoU W. JcyroAyret Ralph Ftalkoa Helen e. Day , . Alan Williams N.a, S r.on,on Ma, .hall PUJtr J. . Amtlant Bui-nr.a """.,,., L,,0r t"," j4Ck L Lahm.y.r MONDAY MORNING. 1NV STl'PKNTS will rturn to Lincoln today, 1 .xpcct.nc to continue their round of scholastic activilic Monday morning. Spring recrsa. accord inc to the univetity calendar, came to an abrupt clow on Thuwday morninp. but .tudent.n realize the futility of returning Kfore Monday. 'Dialbfled presents hia views or the half week holiday In the Student Tulsc column. Unless the ?prinfr vacation period is Riven for the benefit of overburdened bookworn'.s who must pre pnre term rP". nillk MP ov"due 'Knnients and bring scholastic work up to date. It Is Imprac tical and useless. Three days are required for most students to travel to their homes and make the re turn trip to Lincoln. They are given scarcely enough time to eat one meal with their families, hint for a check, and board the return train. Classes on Thursday. Friday and Saturday after poring vacation are poorly attended. Scores of stu dents remain at home until later in the week, know ing that little will be iv.-complished in the aftermath of the holidays. Few assignments are given the lonely group of conscientious Cornhuskers return ing on time. Dissatisfied" offers numerous objections to tne present plan of predimissal vacation. His sugges tion that the holiday be extended to a full week or completely abolished is practical. The taste of scholastic freedom provided in the three day pe riod is not conducive to a whirlwind finish of the school term, nor is it sufficient to rest and refresh students. Abolition of the short recess might aggravate the collegiate poker players who thrive at their re spective fraternity or rooming houses during the vacation, but it would be relief to those who spend a strained trio of days in an attempt to relax. If spring vacation is considered advisable and neces sary, it should be allowed to take up a full week. If It is simply a well meant, but unsuccessful at tempt to provide a rest period, it should be eliminated. blllty that h might attend mt of thea drm with out going by the aytide. Soma two or thrM years older than the aveag frcithwoman, tha delicate product of Whousia Hall nUrs the Unlveraity of Nebiaaka. Her Urge. wit ful eyea are temporarily blinded by the comparative freedom whUta eiiata. Teihapa ! la like a cajjed bird who flrat realties the drlltiounea of the out side world, which It has only glimpsed through the tern bars of its pnn. The vaat differences in conduct may sbotk her and leave her liae U frightened, timid wren, always seeking shelter. On the other hand, shs may become a Uld. cairle.a night owl. Segregation, even though It my appear deni able to some. Is only temporary. The wild P''0 ably a rather naughty place, but knowledge of in shortcomings Is a greater protection than Ignor ance. Tarents. In their conscientious attempts to ruide their offspring alonr the straight and narrow. often low sight of these fundamental facts. Whoi Hails reap the benefits and hixk-eay gins gamer their parents' shortii;htedne. 8oine girls vainly try to nirrl the problems urn fronted bv women In a coeducational ch. and tell their students how to act when outside their clois tered hslls. Forewarned may be forearmed in some Instances, but it is direct experience with the world and a realisation of the Inexplicable phenomena of human nature that everyone mut have to be ade- quately prepared K meet life as it eMMs Zulu elrls win their husbands by dancing, but here In America It's the Intermission that count. inrinUr of the faculty of the t'niveitity of Illinois, his alma mater. IUrs Ta Oivids Tims. I. r Rrtltra will divide III BY DAVID FCLLMAN. i time between the department of . . . IH.IU...IIU mnA lha The extraordinary diffuultirs miry ' " 'L " A STUDINT LOOKS AT PUBLIC AffAlRS. The Student Pulse aianad contribution! porlintnl 10 malltra of alu d.M Mo nd tha univra.y "'""'"'J"' drpartmtnt. Opmiona aubmiilad should bo britt and conceit. MASKED REFORMERS. -THE PSYCHOLOGY underlying the issuance of "With Fire and Sword," recently published sheet of enlightenment, is basically sound, according to a letter appraring in the Student Pulse column Fri day morning. Us author believes that the piercing floodlight of publicity will go far in correcting the flagrant evils which exist on the University of Ne braska campus. "It enlightens the students and the public by permitting them to look into our university instead of merely at it, as we have hitherto been compelled to do by the fortitude of the laissez-faire attitude," comments the critic. It seem.j quite unreasonable that any self ap pointed, irresponsible body of students, taxpayers or public spirited individuals, should be recognized b eligible to search out the musty crannies of ad ministration and organization. Perhaps the au thors of "With Fire and Sword," together with its tolerant readers, take the sheet too seriously. Questions. The I UU1IL l'i.alil-Mi statements made in the mysterious sheet do not express the sentiment of the student body as a whole. Several individuals, thinking alike on mat ters of nublic interest, may make known their re flections under cover of secrecy, but a group so constituted Is scarcely to be dubbed a public sav ior. If a professor flunks a score of students they might band together and insult, sianaer ana "disclose" that instructor. Would anyone be in terested? Information which makes its appearance beneath the cloak of secrecy and darkness may or may not be true. Fact, Uius presented, may De ratten sen mmlv. Radical opinions concerning the competence and character of men and women, however, is of little value. The handful of upright, honorable revolutionists may express the thoughts of the "Gadflies," but not of the student body, remaps their publication will come to replace the defunct Awgwan, in time. WHOOZIS HAILS COME parents gasp in supercilious astonishment at the suggestion that they send 'their daughter to a coeducational state university. They shudder at the thought of their tender, frail little girl amidst the flagrant sins and laxities which they believe nrevail in such institutions. Under the Impression that they are delivering their precious charge from an educational hades, they send ner to a gins rhnol. She enters Whoozis Hall, a demure, shy, unsus pecting creature and is taken Immediately Into th prison-like atmosphere of the institutior. While confined within the walls of the collegiate cage, she i..,. r,t th nnrside world through books. Her contacts with the opposite sex are infrequent, If not nrohibited entirely. Eventually, she persuades her parents that she is sufficiently mature to be trusted in a coeducational ahool. After thinking the matter over with rioia deliberation and the use of extensive statistics, her parents decide that perhaps there Is soma possl- SPRING RECESS? To the Editor: . , m And again, we are back in ach.wl arter a nnei. . . . ..., m ra oh so very brier, spring vacation. . starting out with the same old chant of J-e Col lege trying to get by with as little work as po- ihle. In BDite of the fact. I still Deneve m.i w... idea of half week vacations la very, very wet. t iv,m irr nise the university has a large num ber of students whobe homes are considerably dis tant from Lincoln. What Is the result from mis extended weekend? It merely means that it me student really carea about going borne, he will rH mr,i .f his time in an automoDiie or uu uc train, with a couple of meals taken with the home a klnklll folks. Such an undertaking oesiocs ocihk unsatisfactory. Is somewhat expensive. Because 01 im. i,r mentioned consideration, many students are unable to take advantage of the vacation to call on their parents, either because they cannoi .vn on livlne expenses, or because the expense in volved Is not commensurate with the value re ceived. . . A second consideration is the working stuaeni. Either one of two things happen. The part time student must remain in town, with no value re ceived in being at school, and his living expenses exceed the revenue received from the part time work. Again there is the student who stretches his part time Job to full time during the holiday. . a m J a, AV.,..m4 Such an arrangement Is again Daa. ior jum .u-.ui as soon as he gets in the swing of bis extra duties. it is time to traipse back to college. T am told, however, that one snouian i gnpe un less he has a remedy for the ill which he is decry- . - TUa ing. For this. I will offer two suggestions. first, and most satisfactory to most parties, would be an extension of the vacation to a full ween. Tf thi would not fit into the plans of the univer sity. I would suggest that spring vacation be done away with entirely. To me that wouia dc vasuy better than the present arrangement. The regular rhedule would not be broken up so unnecessarily. Heavens knows, there are enough distractions dur- 4r,r the last of the vear. Ivy day, with an or us holy (whatever it is now), "weeks" and "days" of all kinds, entertaining alumni and whatnot, makes serious study and accomplishment practically im possible for the rest of the year. How about it? Just try to vacation or go to school; in either case it is practically impossible at this season of the year. A PROTEST. To the editor From certain secret buzzings about the campus, I am inclined to believe that Miss Jieppner wan mistaken when she said that girls were not inter ested in the idea of a change back to the 12:30 limit for house rules. In fact I can't think of a girl who doesn't complain frequently about the rush and push in the eating houses that lie conveniently near party rooms. It isn't a question of service at mosi 01 meac places. On the contrary it is a question 01 geiiuig anywhere and finding a place to sit and eat. It is hardly reasonable to believe that a boycott would omvrfv thin. We can't expect drug stores ana caieu to enlarge their quarters to accommodate the crowds. The only way of getting a place anywhere is to go early from dances that end an 100 eariy. students who live in Lincoln can go to outlying places where the crowds do not go, but it is im possible to go far and still get nacn 10 soroniy university boarding houses by 12:15. An extra fifteen minutes would neip out in inia respect if not in any other, and what ever the "other reasons" why boys want this change may be, I think I am representing the opinion of a great r.ritv of coeds bv sayintr that it wouia mane things much more convenient for us. We think the mon of this school are honest enough to De Dacning this campaign for convenience only, and not for ul terior motives. wliith th Amenin pnoii h experienced this year, brought to a hoiritils i lima with the hunting of 3.'0 helpless men in the slats peni tentiary of Ohio, bring out i lerly a fundament si weakness of our M,liUcal ay.tem That weaknea I the employment of men with no optHial aptitude, generally for po litical reasons. i fill positions which require a high decree of hpecialised administrative skill and training. The use of tne amateur und the politician In American ad ministrative services flows fr-m an unhealihy and unreasonable dis. trust of the expert on the part of the people, and from a sila ays lem which civil service regulations have by no means obiiteisteii irom the American scene. In reviewing the iaoes for the Ohio tragedy, our publicists aie generally stressing, as me iiinu mental reason, the overcrowding to which the penitentiary was sub jected. They cite the fad that here was a prison designed to carry a maximum load of 2.&H) attempting to house 4.000. It Is. of course, quite obvious that discipline Is very apt to become a difficult thing to maintain under such con ditions, and that the prisoners, who are still human boings. de spite their incarceration for hav ing broken the laws of society, will react dangerously and violently to oppressive circumstances. The iwimrinohnrns of the state of Ohio. I in failing to provide for adequate I prison facilities, is a condition u Ini 11 is wiucitprenu am"ii states of the union. The public, however, is not gen erally blamed overmuch for the in adequacies of the prnton system, because of the fact th:it crime has Increased out of all proportion to the normal demands of our popu lation. Whereas In Kngland pris ons are ling cloned up. or sold to private persons who delight In the ownership of curiosities, the de mand here for prison facilities has far exceeded the expectation of a normal supply under ordinary cir cumstances. It is quite properly pointed out that it Is reasonable to expect the states to spur on their building programs, and that It Is also unfair to denounce a sit uation which was hard to antici pate. Since prohibition and hard times have swelled to enormous proportions the opportunities for legal crimes, more time is asked. Tho lack of building space in our prisons, due to a large crime wave which was not foreseen, however, does not tell the whole story. The investigations which are being con ducted at Ohio reveal other con siderations which are fundamental in their importance. They dis close the fact that the care and management of 4.000 prisoners was in the hands of a group of men. with a warden at their head, who were gross amateurs in prison management. A most significant fact in this: That there were no rules or orders ever worked out to cope with a possible fire in the prison . This constitutes not only sheer stupidity ana incompetence, but, under me circumsiuni.es, rrimlnnl npp-lipence. That there were no fire regulations and no plan worked out in advance to hnnrlle n nrohlem alwavs imminent does not speak well for the current standards in prison management. The average prison warden holds his job by virtue of a political ap pointment Many of them are, to be sure, mnereniiy aDie men, miu Knme of them do acauire a crreat deal of knowledge about the prob lem or detaining ana caring ii criminals. But the qualifications of training and special knowledge as conditions precedent to entering the profession are almost nuga tory. And the situation with res pert to the prison guards and as sistants is even more deplorable. This sort of work is considered by the men wbo carry it on as just another job. Men are hired for positions as prison guards with al most no care as to special quali fications. The American people have not as yet developed a trust in the nervines of the expert permanent official. In Great Britian and France the permanent expert ad ministrator who spends his life in the service as a career is taken as u nntuml und most important part of the governmental machine. Po litical omcers may come miu go, at the top of the official hierarchy, but the vast general staff which rnrrlps nn the routine of COVem- ment goes on without regard for the political viciS8iiuaes oi me parties. We have this yet to learn to trust the servant of the state and to consider his position not as a mere "job" but as a career, for ing are elementary criteria. REGENTS ELECT FIVE PROFESSORS FOR NEW POSTS (Continued From Tage 1.) same grade for three years begin ning September, 1930. Dr. Kneier, whose place Dr T.Ancster will take, recently tend ered his resignation-, effective at the ciosti or me scnooi year, lu Mate llialoiical Mociely. whore he will act as assiaiani i cuii-vm,-tendenl A. K riheldon. lie is now assmiant professor of histoiy at the I'hiveiaity of TVifonin. where l.e has been on a teaching staff since UU. I'rvleasor Kellers re ceived his A. H. drk-rrs from the I'mveisity of Kansas In 11 and Ins M. A. and 1'h. IX front the L'niveisity of Wisconsin. He ha been actively Interested In the work of the Wisconsin State His torical society and the Mississippi Valley Historical association for a uumler of years and is now chair man of the progiam committee of the latter body. His wife Is also a graduate of the University of Kansas. According to University officials pr. Sellers comes very highly roi-.tmmended as a man of Ideas dated by thoughtful students. Bssoco Replaces Engberg. Or. Miguel A. Hasoco. who will be assistant proirasor of mathema tics, is now research fellow In tute of Technology. He will take the place left vacant by the death laid year of Ur. C. C. Kngberg. Ir. BtWMHO received his under graduate tralrlng at the L'nlver- . a .. ktas sity of California ana nrrnni . Ph. l. degree last year from the institution with which he Is now associated. He Is of Spanish-Italian descent and has lived in the United States twenty years. Ills associates on the Pacific roast unite In saying that he Is one of the best teachers they have even known. He Is also recommended as a mathematician of high rank. Swayiee Fills New Position. Mr. Swavree. who will fill a newly created position as assistant professor of personnel manage ment in the college of business ad ministration. Is now a graduate student and instructor In econ omics In the university extension of Columbia university. He re ceived his A. B. degree from a bash college In 1925 and took some work at the University of Chicago. He received his master s from Columbia and has completed . - r .1,. u.,,rU fnr his doctors mom ui i, - . deeree. Mr. Swayzee was selected for the new courncs m management after a study of many candidates, according to Dean J. K. ixitossnsnw ARMY OFFICERS GIV TRIBUTE TO JEWEn MILESTONES AT NEBRASKA Isndards established for mo hers at Nebraska. ".Shakespeare la lecaivlng a now voicua today, and it la a modern ued hhakespcare that is receiving favor. Ilamlel" used to be given, as a rlasaic. now it Is put on just hka any other modern play, with ha same verve, tempo, adequate n . .. i T.I.M wsits an.l celerity of movement. Reserve Men Present Token i 'odVed tJsy for r.n . . . n I - 4 I . ... ..t nr.! fur lla lilararir eriAimiirui " ' - and classic qualities alone. Tbs language may be old fashioned but I ha action Is rapid and nst. ural and the audience Is mads to forget the elaborate cumbersome Khakeseare of the clae-irooin.' Difficult Uderta.ia. lUrnKf Is the concluding play of the University Players' 1V2V 1930 season and Is one of tho mnl stupendous undertakings of that group. Mr. Jenks Is to bo assisted by a well known cast of favontea. Among the more Impor. tant members of the cast are found: II. Alice Howell as Oer inula nuesn and mother to Ham let; Herbert Yenne as Horatio, a friend of Hamlet; w. ivouey wr ner as Polonlus. Lord Chamberlain- Jack Hank as Laertes, son to Polonlus; Kdward Tay'or as the ghost: and iiarian u. r-asioo aa The King. i Dorothy I'rotur Will Give Senior Hrciul Marguerite Kllnker presents Miss Dorothy Prouse In her sen ior recital for the degree of bachelor of fin arts st 4 p. m. Sunday afternoon In the Temple theater. PrBtom. SVar'attl. Fuloralo; lwuln. I Cog. m; lUmeati. a Tambnuria; Itxh. rro Iwtr and rtif. minnr ...... . l-.vkl..MkMh ! V tMHl Carnival -in. Allm. Romania, Srl,r Krnailn. I'rl4. Op. 11. No Tra lutl. Op. 11. ho. 10; aiancli. Sacanad Saint ana. Cwwotio. a minor. Op. It; AIIro orharMnSo. franco. APRIL 27 1925 vnnrri Klub produc tion, was well received by Lincoln and Omaha audiences. The stadium office announced lL.,t nil riACMtl A who had failed to C.UUI ' pwf- - pay their pledges would be per sonally visuea. . The agricultural Y. W. C. A. elected officers. 1920 r Fair drew a large crowd and considerable comment. ... . The regents announced mai a tipw million uouar gyiima.Biuiu would be erected. The editor discussed -pipe courses" for want or a more in teresting topic. The tracK learn maue na mov appearance, defeating VVesleyan in a dual meet. Sixty pre-medical students jour neyed to Omaha on an inspection trip. Eight players survived the pre liminaries In the handball tourna ment, 1910 The Forest club annual was lished and circulated. The McCook Annual was organ ized with fourteen members. The last military hop of the season was given at the Lincoln hotel. 1905 Various members of the faculty complained because a requested salary increase had been denied. Captain Borg announced that spring football practise would begin soon. Students in the forestry depart ment were acquiring practical knowledge by working in the for estry reserve at Haisey, jveor. McKflvie Will Address Meeting at Iowa Stale AMES, la. S. R. McKelvie, for mer governor of Nebraska and now representing the wheat growers' interests on the federal farm board, will speak at Iowa State college the evening of May 8, before high school students and future farmers who attend the high school agricul tural contests and the congress of future farmers. May 8 and 9, dur ing the college's Veishea celebra tion. Definite arrangements as to whether McKelvie will speak in a meeting open to the general public in the afternoon have not been completed. Of Esteem to Cadet Unit Leader. Lancaster county reserve offi cers association held a regular meeting at Nebraska hall Wednes day evening. The feature cr the evening's proceedings was the be- slow ihk Of L.WUI. lOI. T. F. jewrn IL (). T. C. head, with a sirsp watch. Xlaior J. (J. Kaes. now in busi ness in Lincoln, made ihe presen tation. He praised me miiuajy staff of the university and paid a tribute to the leader. who is soon to tske command else where. Major Kaes saw service In the World war as captain In field artillery, and after the armistice was sent to the field aitillery sec lion of It. O. T. C. activities at the University of Nebraska. After this phase of the department was abandoned. Major Kaes quit ac tive service but is still connected with the reserve ofliceis training corps. Program Feature. Lieutenant Colonel Jewell, in thanking the association for the remembrance, reiterated his re grets for being ordered to a rw field. Precision drilling by a crack unit of the Pershing Kiflcs fea tured tho program. Cnpt. Iluasel Skinner, ft. O. T. C. alaff mem ber, told of experiences of gener als in the Civil war and various happenings and Incidents of the war. Films of the military tac tics were shown as a part of the program. The pictures loiu me methods usea oy me rsrumii in fighting the Turks at Mesopo tamia during the World war. The Untlsh. in order to protect their oil fields which furnished the fuel for their ships, sent men into Mesopotamia, and successfully de fended the fields from the Turks and kept the latter out of India u'hnrn there was a IiossibilltV of their inciting a religious uprising. Lunch Given. Th hnttle tactics as well as the methods of pontoon bridge con struction were shown. The films ccuue from rort Lavenworin, Kas., where motion pictures are used as a method of teaching mili tary history and tactics. A lunch concluded me evening. A near record number or mem bers was in attendance, according to reports of the affair. HART JENKS RECALLS EARLY DAYS IN FINE ART SCHOOL (Continued From Tage 1.) to take their place," continued Mr. Jenks. High Standards Set. "This thinir I would like to say, he added, The higher ideals of the dramatic art which are being pounded daily into the stu dents of this university and which cvprn nounded into me when I was a student form an intangible a. .. 1 J .S force ror gooa in me worm or drama today. They have kept me always aiming at the higher phases or the art and nave given me the courage to refuse offers which although lucrative financi ally did not measure up to the Mothers Cay Any Time of the Day Is a Good Time in Uie Day for Good Eatf STOP AT THE University Candy Kitchen 244 No. 13th -7933 The Davis School Service Nebraska's Leading Teachers' Agency Established 1916 B-4954 C33-6 Stuart Bldg., Lincoln (Formerly 138 No. 12th SO I S May the llih lia( could ba a finer rtmem oranca than a Ch&rmlnff Gilt from Georara. "To Love la to Reni'mber." PlFTS THAT will bring gtarinrae to her hrart. . . . Glfta that ahe will alwava cherlih and remember. Imported Art Plecea for the Home, Intimate tninRi for her houdolr and pretty thlnga for personal wear. 'RKETINO Carda to carry a mesiage of cheer and devotion to "Her." Vou will find lust the card with )unt the am tlment you deelre In our choice assortment. DISMISSING CLASSES. To the editor: This writer believes that when tbe following in cident occurs, it's time that the university should effect a change. A professor appeared in class ana stated that it would be an opportune ume 10 u pense with the class for that day, or to do some such novel thing as hold class on some grassy por tion of the campus. Due to certain university rul ings, however, he had no right to dismiss his class. This professor Inferred that he might lose his Job if he were to dismiss a class without permission from the proper avthorities.' Mary univeTslties do not even demand a stu dent's Attendance at classes, and certainly do not for bid a professor dismissing a class when be is in the mood to do so. However, many Instructors at Nebraska are less conscientious about thia ruling than the above men tioned. Nevertheless it appears entirely unneces sary that an Instructor should find It necessary to be directed by such an absolute ruling. R. 8. B. Hosiery Specials This Week at KINNEY'S Ladies full fashioned chiffon service weight, special per pair $1.00 pr. 2 pair $1.85 Ladies' full fashioned pure silk, spe cial per pair $1.29 pr. 2 pair $2.50 We hsva Just received an entire rv stockstock of the do-fed spring colors, fea turing si'.k top and French heels. fcaUifat tlon guarantee -with every pair. Join our Hosiery Club. With the purchase of ten pairs you receive one pair free. Si OTTOEB Art work by well known artlata and lentimenti by America'! mot popular authora. It will ba a conatant re minder to her of your will he n constnrre re mMT RS OIIICI M)PPtlES LNW0 , fefe 5teiZiy- htdhonfrj Td. B-1313 1213 N 3tro LEFAX For Engineer and SOCIAL SCIENCE Students A loose leaf hand book on every technical subject. Ask us for a catalog. Stadia Reduction Tables 10c 6 Place Log Tables ...30c Trig Functions 25c and many others 200 Blank Forms Pocket Size Every Student User Is An Enthusiast LEFAX Students' Note Books Complete $1.00 Select individual data on any subject from our complete library at 5c each. Tucker-Shean Students' Supplies, 1128 '0' KINNEY St 10Z4 "O" St. MONDAY is the LAST DAY TO ORDER Senior Invitations ORDER AT ONCE Co-Op Book Store East of Temple 7