The Daily Nebraskan . , Official Student Newspaper of the University of Nebraska 7iir.xix-M. Ha LINCOLN. MUKASkX. TI KM)V. MY 20. Vr.M. l'HICK I IVi: CENTS. YEARBOOK SALES MOVING SWIFTLY KENNEDY STATES Supply of Cornhuskers Is Expected to Be Gone By Saturday. NEW SECTIONS ADDED Mother Goose Thee Uscd( In stuaeni liic ; Division. j rnrnbusktr sales were moving -i.iiv vesterday. and the avail- Itjited before the end of the tetk. aitordinj to George Ken Mdy," pusmesa manager of the januil. More than iimj were sold rtitrdy. ann a griti nurawr hi iht booki fold last fall were tils- tnhuted. Tbt ls'-iu coronusarr naa mm .r.iumed a one of the most im am of the Nebraska yearbook nurd in recent years. Several novation were Introduced wblrh irt entirely unique with this year j usual, one or me most oeauuiui i wiiione of the book Is the t euit iKtioa at the front of the hook. Thia section was finished In the. Centner process which Rives cam put scenes a rich painted effect. Tte pictures are printed on a irtvy tanvaa like paper which rives the effect of a canvas paint- 1BJ. lOiorea uivwon rages. Division pares which separate tat sections of the annual are done a eight colors, each color neces sitating: a separate press run. The irt work was done by Hart Tin- ly, formerly of Chicago. He is 10- prded by authorities as the fore (Continued on Page Two.) WILL HOLD PICNIC Ndim and fl rl MPti-more. tn tin i To Ag Campus on Outing Wednesday. Xewly selected and old members if sophomore commission will give t picnic on Wednesday afternoon H agricultural campus. About fifty girls have made reservations and will meet, at Ellen Smith hall it S o'clock. Dorothy Thurlow Is chairman of thi committee which will plan the program and entertainment for the affair. She will be assisted by lane Ycungson, Gretchen Hast- mfs, Gertrude Clark and Jean nrtte Casidy. Tbt committee which was re- ponsible for extending invitations lo all of the new girls, was headed by Marjorie Peterson. Rachel Branson, Gertrude Love, Paula Eastwood and Lois Baldruff were tlso members of the committee. Leone Ketterer Is in charge of the menu and will be assisted by Dorothy Sawyer, Lois Brooks, Helen Baldwin and Ruth Ann Niamey. Tickets for the affair are twenty-five cents and may be secured from any one of the following committee, Berenice Hoffman, Bil lie Beaumont, Theona Steele, Adcle Bsler and Gretchen Hastings. Transportation will be provided for all girls who desire it, if thev till meet at Ellen Smith hall at o'clock on Wednesday afternoon. Margaret Day is chairman of the committee making arrangements for transportation and has wbik ir'g with her, Gwendolyn Hager, Betty Cook, Betty Sain and Mar garet Sowles. Sociologist Has Developed Modern Technique for Dealing With Social Prnhlems! Philanthrovist Passes a. v . W m W J "Scientific social work lias fcnty-i'ive vcars." stated llaltic sociology. "Since under the Population and impersonal relations, tnc oia pmianwiiuj io loueer coi.sidcivd adenuatc." She exnlained that a tcchninuc of social case work lias dc- Woped which is taught chiefly in raduate schools of social work. A Warse in social case work is given y the department of sociology of tlie University of Nebraska, which u open to senior women majoring u social case work. . Seven Take Work. Seven women are enrolled in the course at the present time, includ es v-arne King, Iene Carpenter, ta Frisch, EUice Willson, Ruth ilferaon and Gertrude Klcgg. rnis course gives an academic ground for such training and ;lde8 a vocational test for the !ja5ent through tb- field work," J- Williams n., She added t ..ebraika at jr., ita either go " apprenticeships in social wel Mhoof8mCi'S or enter giaduate nwl.of 016 women who will com-1 Pe7. 8 course to June. Ruth Jo person, has already accepted a ttoB with the Associated Char- ?ltoJ0niana feri t dePrtneDt of sociology of inr tk u diffrent majors, accord Pl'tta. .3- w""ms. Three corn take , ,oc:!a cas work aJor EiehtEPv otology courses, jwo hours of sociology arc ttittM . fnpe woman is ad hich u L lh c, wr,t c,ass e v,. Fvt "nder the direction iiA t&p Herrick- r i,ms plained that k in the field. They Krrmre A pjMti nt mr tit j . ' " "A -tVurir.y ol Ttt. Jirail CHARLES 8ELLERIER. Instructor in English and for the past year an associate editor of the Trairie Schooner. who has been added to the staff of the English department of the Uni versity of Honda at Gainesville. He Is a memier of Sigma Uu silon. honorary literary fraternity. UP Last Issue of Publication Invites Former Students To Visit Campus. BURNETT PENS ARTICLE Round up plans accompanied by a cordial Invitation to come back to the University of Nebraska for June and 7 is the message in the last issue of the Alumnus, the ! official publication of the Alumni , .'ociation, to all Nebraska a.'.;-uni. Chancellor K. A. Burnett in con cluding Ins article, "More Than Britl; and Mortar." emphasizes the benefits which would arise from "alumni solidarity" which he says would help the alumni them seives ss well as the Institution. I Chancellor Burnett says "The de- I vclopmcnt of the University ol i Nebraska makes every graduate's degree worth more in reputation maken the degree of every otner graduate worth that much more Urges Unification. Suggestions made by the chan cellor were that we cut across the lines of fraternities and sororities and other campus organizations and unite them all In some com mon interest: that when noted men come to the campus to speak arrangements should be made to enable the students to meet and talk with these men personally. Additional ideas were that more wave be provided to enable the students in each college to know each other better and to enable each graduating senior to know the other members of his clasn. The last suggestion made by thr chancellor and one that he stressed very much was that every graduating student should feci (Continued on Page Two.) MATZKK ACCEPTS . MAGAZINE POSITION Merlin Matzke, who graduated from the college of agriculture in February and who has been study ing in the school of journalism since that time, has accepted an editorial position on The Ne braska Farmer. . Matzke was editor-in-chief of The Cornhusker Countryman, col lege of agriculture publication, during the first semester of this year. He is a member of Alpha Zca, agricultural honorary and is affiliated with Alpha Gamma Rho. His Darental home is at w esiern, Neb. - - t -level. .ped within the last Plum Williams, professor ol modern condilion ot tinstauic . . . , . th. direction of the Lincoln Social Welfare society from 1 to 5 o'clock every Tuesday and Thursday. The first semester their work is carefully supervised but the second semester they are permitted to work out the solu tions of the problems they en counter. Work Is Supervised. "They work in the same way ad the internes of a hospital," Mrs. Williams explained. She stated that some people objected to send ing students out to cope with prob lems of such great importance, but she pointed out that students were not permitted to undertake such work until they h&ve comp eted specified courses and that their work was rigidly supervised for the first semester. Mrn. Williams stated that there were several reasons why certain families needed the assistance ol he social worker. These reasons are unemployment, ickneM d broken homes. The first named reason is the most prevalent. She pointed out that this problem might be solved in several days. Thl father of the home may be only temporarily thrown out of emplovment; he might be lazy and not want a job: or be willing to work and unable to secure a posi- '"she said that sometimes voca l Continued on Page Three.) COLISEUM WLL u mm. MUSICAL EVENT High School Orchestras of All Parts of Nation to Compete Here. TiAfn ic uawr cmTrorn TWELVE HAVE ENTERED Icni ci j i r 1 ,auu iiuficnis txpccicrJr nccoro i micnaancc is rorecasi. Orchestras and musician from all over the United State, vull be A n a n t 1 m K a lOtfl Mitt. n a I . ....v. ... i.. ,v iht automobile owners should lor ' J!'!!h.h?S ort,lr c?,nl."11 10 'should noli be compelled to carry be held in the university Coliseum , r.rsotllll lnjury ,,, propcrty m May 29 lo 31. It la definitely I inranre known that twelve high schools will be represented by orchestias while others are tentatively listed. Officials believe that this year's contest will surprass In nze the one held last year at Iowa City. Iowa. Schools definitely entered are: Flint. Mich.; Hammond, Ind.;, Abraham Lincoln high bcbuol, : Council bluffs, Iowa: Krobel high ; vii wi i xs u t auv.f ubii asvuU( ; Te..; Fast Orange. N J.; John Ad-1 ams high school, Cleveland, o.; East high school, Waterloo, la.; and Lincoln high school in :lass A. Koosevelt high school, F:ast Chi cago, Ind.; and Dearborn. Mich.; have entered class B. Peru. Neb., la the sole entrant lo class C thus far. Other Entries Pending. The officials of the contest are negotiating with Fort Worth. Tex., in class A; Mt. Clemens, Mich., and Lew Wallace high school, Gary. Ind.. in class B and tin class C, Flora, Ind. From all expectations it thought about 1.000 students will be competing. iLncoln high school orchestra is composed of ninety three players otferlng complete symphonic instrumentation. East Orange, N. J., (has about elghtby musicians and the other class A orchestras have approximately the same number. Walter Bloch. nationally known musician is director of the Flint orchestra which won third place In class K last year. A system of lnslf-IHit lnt n.rt irtn in irnwii. mt individual Instruction in vo?ue at Hammond. Ind., which won second place at Iowa City, gives. 1U or chestra a decided advantage so far aa individual skill of the musicians Is concerned Rudolph Soldi, director of the Lincoln little symphony orchestra Is director or the Abraham Lin coln high school orchestra of Coun cil Bluffs, entered in class A. II. S. Warren, director of the Froebel high school organization from Gary ls pioneer In Instrumental (Continued on Page Four.) E TO S STAFF Edwin Colbert Is to Join Institution of Natural History. Edwin Harris Colbert, who re ceived his A. B. in 1928 and his M. A. degree in 1929 at the Uni versity of Nebraska, has been ap pointed to the staff of the Amer ican Museum of Natural History in New York City. Last . year Mr. Colbert was awarded a university fellowship in vertebrate paleontology by Colum bia university, and it was while conducting research work there that his appointment was made known. .1. P. Colbert, instructor in applied mechanics at the Uni versity of Nebraska, is a brother of Edwin Colbert. Dr. Henry Fairfield Osborn. president of the American Museum of Natural History, who requested the appointment of Mr. ColVri, intends to make him his under study, according to reports. The fellowship which Colbert was awarded last year draws to an end in Jupe. Sixty-four such awards were given and these were distributed among but seventeen states and several foreign coun tries. The award provided for specialization in paleontology and Colbert has been working toward his doctor of philosophy degree at the eastern institution. Collected Fossils. Last summer, Colbert, with Paul McGrew, geology student, con ducted an expedition into the bad lands of Nebraska to collect fos sils. While going to school at Ne braska, Mr. Colbert spent much time at the museum mounting fos sil skeletons. His home is in Maryville, Mo. CHEAPER TICKETS FOR BIG SIX MEET OFFERED STUDENTS University of Nebraska students will be granted a reduced rate ad mission to the Big Six conference track and field championships to be held at the University of Ne braska Memorial stadium, Friday and Saturday, according to an nouncement by Herbert D. Gish, athletic director. The general admission rate to the meet for non-studenta will be fifty cents for the preliminaries and $1 for the finals. Students may purchase tickets at twenty- five centa for the Friday prelim Inariea and fifty cents for the Sat urday finals. It will be necessary for the students to present their athletic tickets at the time if the purchase. DLIIATK OtESTIONS TO Hi: C1I0SLN BY XOTlfOV SCHOOLS Seven topics have been chosen for special consideration ' the Nebraska Mate high school debat ing league. The eight by-eight schools in the league will lake a referendum on the, questions, chnuilng by popular vote the one to be used 'next fall and winter. The selected sever are: III. Re- a.lved that the rbam store Is .or . la noli desirable. i2i. .lesolved I that the nations should lor should . noli disarm for such forces as arej ' needd for police purposes. i3. I llu,KH Ih.l .1.1. .-h.,.l Minal. Iration fund Is lor la noti desir n.u r...ii n.,u. f.ir N-Ai,r,.u. Ml. Mrsolved ibal Installment buying as practiced today Is lor is noti justifiable, lai. Resolved that , XnX.VTIn.n harmful. (Oi. Resolved that the i United States should (or should ; I il.tiit lit ( 'Bna.lllit ai'tlam ! of . , controI. ,7l. Reilved ' ... E U-jrf Jcnks' Portrayal of Hamlet Lauded; Entire Cr.st Commended. SCHOOL CONGRATULATED Shakespeare. "Hamlet" and Hart Jenks revealed themselves dramat ically in Omaha last week end when the University Tlayers per formed before Omaha play-goers at Technical hign school audito rium. In a review reported by Omaha papers, . the production was sue- . ccssful, technically, and phys " ically. The acting of Mr. Hart Jcnks called forth surprise as well as congratulations. The support ing effort was said to be well done. Finally the "school of fine arts at the University of Nebraska de serves fervent congratulations for the most daring thing that has yet been achieved by the dramatic de partment." Jenks Resembles Hamlet. Mr.' Jcnks was commended by the Omaha reviewer for something t tnan mere lechnlcai ,kH1 ie .... and faultless elocution, great qual ities in themselves. Physically, he represented Hamlet, by such means as athletic proportions, facial ex pressions, and mental attitude. ,tt .xprcssing indecision, and To be or not to De, says nam comments the reviewer: "It is as if you were overhearing the proc ess of thought. There are pauses, telling silences; there are the vari ations of tone; there are sudden shifts from slow to rapid tempo." "A man who upbraids himself for faltering indecision, and yet is in truth, wonderfully decisive note for example what a deadly slash his rapier makes through the curtains when he thinks the king is odiously eavesdropping. This is in the scene where Polonius is slain." Only a half unfavorable criti cism was made of the production ! and that concerned the lighting ef- foct in the Khost sceue in which a lla.nlet appears to the critic as oc lug lh:atric. . Complete Cast Praised. The supporting cast came in for praise. "Harlan G. Easton made an admirable ghost. Miss Alice (Continued on Page Two.) 10,000 PEOPLE BRAVE RAM TO SEE FLOWERS Floral Display in Morrill Hall Attracts Record Breaking Crowd. A record breaking crowd of 10, i.J people came through the rain and cold to see the third annual flower show Sunday, May IS, held tn elephant hall in Morrill hall. Hundreds of flowers and plants were on display in the main hall and in the surrounding corridors. Prof. E. H. Barbour, chairman of the department of geology, es timated that 2,000 people were viewing the flowers at 4:30, and said that at that time the passage through the hallways was almost impossible. C. K. Ott and C. C. Campbell were -in charge of the tables, and Mrs. A. C. Nelson was in charge of placements. Mr3. George O. Smith and L. M. Gates took care of registrations and entries. Prizes were under the care of W. H. Dunman and C. C. Wiggans. Mrs. W. F. Day was in charge of the : publicity, and Miss Marjorie Shanafelt, posters. CAMPUS CALENDAR ) Tuesday, May 20. ' Sigma Eta Chi Initiation at Vine Congregational church at Twenty-fifth and S streets at 7 CiOCK. Vespers at 5 o'clock in Ellen Smith hall. Wednesday, May 21. De Molay meeting. 8 o'clock. Student council meeting, Temple. ..jrsday, May 22. Interfraternity council meet ing. Morrill hall, room 9, at 7:15 May 25. Kappa Phi initiation. S to 5 p. m., St. Taul M. E. church. At tendance required . CRITICISM BY VOLO APPEARS IN MAGAZINE! LltCTary DtgCSt Publishes' i . . ... A l3W TCaCnCrS 5 VlCW 0l D , . n n rTOniDUIOn rOII. i I i nncTinw: iwAnrniiATF' j I proposes Different Set of Queries As to What Is Thought of Liquor. While other people are criticiz ing prohibition under the question : suggested by the Literary Digest , prohibition poll. Professor Lauriz , Void, of the law faculty of the University of Nebraska Is critic-1 ising the questions themselves. , claiming that they do not go to the root of the matter. j The questions that Mr. Void thinks will touch the fundamental I Issues arc not tho.e of yes and no j concerning the law itself, but , rather they should be concerned ' as lo facts about alcohol and i drinking. To drink, and if you I drink, what is the effect on the ! Individual, on society, on the law? Those are the real "questions con- ; terds Professor Void. ; Criticism Printed. The Literary Digest In the issue of May 10. saw fit to publish Mr. : Void's criticism of their plan, as j follows: j "It seems to ine that the most , fundamental questions Involved in connection with prohibition are untouched by the form of ques tions appearing on your ballot. I will suggest a few of these, largely questions of fact, on an estimate of which It would have bean very useful to get a broad cross-section of public opinion, as follows: "I. Do you believe use of alco holic liquois Is injurious to the in dividual himself? 2. Do you be lieve there is any substantial dan ger in the case of most people that moderate drinking may de velop into drinking to excess? 3. Do you believe there is any sub stantial danger to others than the drinker himself involved in his use of liquor? 4.Do you believe pro hibition laws should be obeyed so long as incy nave not Dcen law fully repealed? 5. Are you per sonally a total abstainer 7 "In the" ca3uai afscussion of the prohibition question that I have happened to share I have noticed what seems to be a tendency for those who argue on the wet side to have in the background, if not di rectly avowed, their own personal (Continued on page Three.) Old Garments Sent South by Y.W.C.A. Workers Are Appreciated. In response, to a shipment of old clothes and shoes contributed by university students and scut to the textile strikers about, three weeks ago, a letter of apprecia tion was received by Evelyn Ad ler, head of the industrial staff of the Y. W. C. A., who directed col lection of the clothes. J. Clyde Donnely, one of the strikers, expressed his gratitude at receiving the clothes, and told of the need for the articles by the people. Letter Quoted. "You people have little idea of the conditions confronting the workers of today in the south," the writer declares. "This is not a tale to get sympathy, but it is real, about little children crying for bread in one of the richest na tions of the world. I certainly would like for some of you to come here and investigate the conditions that really exist at the present time." I "The southerners as a rule." the I letter ran, "have a great deal of i pride and have suffered on ac count of It to a great extent. The industries that come into the south are looking for cheap labor, and the southern people are under paid and overworked, not making enough to live on. They only ex ist, and that is about all." COSMOPOLITANS PLAN OFFICERS' INSTALLATION New officers of the Cosmopoli tan club will be installed at the club's last meeting which will be held Thursday evening May 22 at 6:30 in the dining room of the Grand hotel. The officers to be in stalled are: Claude Gordon, Ja maca. president; William Kaplan, Bohemia, vice-president; Juan Pal ais. Philllpplne Islands, secretary; and T. J. Trangco, Philippine Is lands, treasurer. The program for the evening will include a report of the club's accomplishments for the year, short speeches by the incoming and the outgoing officers, and vocal and instrumental music. The public is invited to purchase tickets for the dinn jr. SMEDLEY IS NAMED TO HEAD ORGANISTS Harlan Smedley, who was elected to Phi Beta Kappa a year ago at the university. wa recently appointed president of Lincoln chapter. Nebraska Organist guild. Smedley. one of the youngr Lin coln organists. ( an instructor in Ihe university school of music. Head Nrxl lair I - I i $ r LiiiJ MYRLE WHITE. Junior in the follete nf agricul ture who was chen in a recent election a. manager of ne.M enrs Farmers Fan. White is a member of Farm Houe fraternitv and conies from Tcumeh. He has been prominent in agricultural col lege affairs. , MYRLE WHITE WILL LIE A Pi 1 QQ l AO CAID nLnU JJ Mb I3, a Hunts 1 ,w ,,,m Five Agricultural Students Elected To Board In Recent Election. WAS ON JUNIOR BOARD Myrlc White of Tccunisch. junior in the college of agriculture was chosen manager of the lid Farm ers Fair by vote of the students ot the collese of agriculture at the recent election. Each year the stu dent body elects a board jf thiee senior men and three senior wom en as an administrative body lor Farmers Fair, which is the largest student event in the college of ag riculture. The senior board is assisted by a junior board consistuig of a similar representation of men and women I who are selected bv the senior1 board from the junior cla.-s. Had Charge of Exhibits. White served as a member of the junior fair board for thi3 year's fair and hfl,1 rharrx nf thn rirnart - ,.....,,. ",-,." erection of student catties pan mental exhibits. Other memoers i ,., ,, , . ... i... .j , ... . ... , ... . , i contained in a resolution adopt:'.) elected to the senior fair board arc,,,,, ,hA ,,,. u-,. mm., as follows : Robert Daniel?on. Nesie Lakcman. Lincoln Elizabeth, ti-in... ,,.,,., . ; Will sms Lincoln and licorria ..... , c. ..vi.,ri- '...L.'.u . , . .u1 V niLP WHO l."5 tUlMlilL'.MJ Willi, Farm House, is president of thcj Block and Bridle club a profo&sion-' al agricultural society, and is get-! ting the reputation as a hurdler on ' the varsity track team. I A brother and sister combination 1 was in charge of the fair thla year ;'lon sloukJ enrnrill. ,. as r.uth White, senior home eco-1 tcrmjzc lh. Unlv.r,,lv o1 Nr. nomics student and prominent in braska wonl(J welcome the errr other university activities, served ,tjon nf ,,. . .in.irnt lo as secretary or the senior lair board, during the last ycf. SICMA LPS1LON HOLDS MEETING StIVDAY MCI IT Sigma Upsilon, honorary liter- arv fraternitv. eave a smoker lift ! Sunday nicht for active and pros - pective members at the apa.tmcnt ' prescnlcd the .students castles irica of Orint Sepanek, 1712 iS street. ; to the Kniphts ( Pythias. During the evening, Edward F. i The erection plan contemplate-, Stcpp, jr.. George Dunn; .lack a building program that would Glicve, and Frederick Christcnscn j eventually bring "Pythian Mu read some original poetry and j dent crMIcs' on or near the cam prose for criticism by the group, pus of every college and umver LaSellc Oilman read from Samuel , sity where Pythian boys or mu Hoffenstein's "Poems in Pru.'-e of of Pythians niicht live during Iheir Practically Nothing." college life. The prnpo.vd castlei During the hour before the 1 would be similar to a fraternity smoker. Jack Ericwn. Edward F. 1 house or dormitory. It is esti- Stepp. jr.. and Alan G. Williams were initiated into the organization. Questionnaire Circulated by Lincoln Newspaper Reveals That Majority of Nebraska Coeds Anticipate Marriage "Ncluaskii Coi tls Kx ) t to I.utv." Iiii.is n Lincoln Mar iVntuiT writer. Figures nrr (iiotel to proxe tlic jioint, figures which jut inleresliiifr l;it.i on w lmt pocs on i"n the coll- u woman s niinil. Senior women were interviewed mi one of the uio.st im portant iiK'stions in life. Sooner or later every one meets it. "Will vou marry?" Three-quarters say that a ca reer would lose ils glamour if the prospect of marriage was absent. More insist that marriage is essen tial to their happiness than those who hold that no man. at least no husband, is necessary for the real ization of that condition. Coeds Conservative? Conservative? Yes. the senior j coeds seem to be conservative in j their demana tor me oia, sisnuaru virtues in their mates. Incidentally. 4 percent of those interviewed seem to be in the mar ket for marriage ttis summer or in the fall with the essential provi sion that their fiancs's job seem to indicate that two can live as cheaply as one. Seventy-three out of a. hundred, it eeems. plan to teach. A large majoritv will stay in Nebraska. Mos of" them w ill "make immediate use of their education for a few years before encountering the in evitable union. Why They Marry. Why do girls marry? For love. A few believe in that still. Some will marry "because It is one of the richest experiences of life." "Mairiage is th ultimate happi ness of the woman. rr-arrv because: "It meeis nothing to me." or "I prefer the mdepend- enre the carter br-ngs rather than the bondage of marriage." "L'c - PLANS OUTLINED OP Burnett Sketches Idea of Future Development of University. $10,000,000 IS REQUIRED Construction to Be Done as Funds Arc Allowed; New Buildings Planned. Editor's note: The folloAinj statement was ittued from the of fice of Chancellor E. A. Burnett and it publuhed here verbatim. Plans for ilevel.'pms a betjlitul univctMiy campus have loiij; beeii in the min.ls .f Ihe repents ai. the university admlnMrali'm. So much progress hs been niai? in the lnt ten vests Hist th..e I'tio are inclined to intlcu-c the im pu si it l .I.i.- l.rt.t li.;!i c,i jfptlon of the procrcn alrenOy nu.e. It i. however, but natural th.itanunfinu.lK.rpl.viihoiil.ln..: '"l"r '-Ki fully by penpl. h., have not been fl.w-elv a.v.iiate1 vlih the making of the plan an.I were not in the university when Mit h plans weie being e.plaincl frequently to the puhln Much Is Lacking. The pic.ent tampus l.nk a great deal of lx lug Ideal. Certain things should be done as soon as possible - in any event a :con as the money can be provided. The completed plan calls tor the c::tension of the campus to 3i lecnth street and the purchase of (Continued on Pugt Three. 10 BUILD SCHOOL HOIS PrOCirmi Calls f OT ErCCtiOll . .ci,,j.. P.tu' Over Country. Chancellor E. A. Burnett c- n.J V. - . . . . . ! t" H"u,' ul lul m ji 1 1 ni annum luuvcuuun uciu m I innln . . . . 1 ., , ,,, Commenting on the Idea. Chan- .,, c, ....... ccllor Burnett ssvs "I cannot think of a finer a finer cn terpri.se in which the ordei of Knight of Pythias rould engage than in building Pythian slU'lcnts' castles where their younger mm bers and the sons of their older members could live al i-mall ex- nAnCA '1,i1a A,'iifinf- . n Ali,r9. its campus." Spoerry Favors ld;a. Capt. ;. W. Spoerry of th- United States army, nuw on fluty at the University of Nebraska. who advocated the ciadicatiou of leprosy as a Pythian objective and succe?'lcd in having the supreme I council aiipoint a commiltee w no , took the matter to congrest. al;;o mated that within twenty years or less, every stale in the union will have received its student cjt!e. certain'" says that "I would be sat isfied with my work because of the economic future in my field, and marriage is said to be not so cer tain.' Many of the girls would like to travel. "Why don't Ihey? ' Th ieasou seems to be that eucn things "aren't done." or there is i lack of funds, families need them. There are school debts, too. it pears. Kind of Men Wanted. ' One girl admits bravely that "1 don't even demand a husband. Those who have an idea that thc-y would like one have definite ideas concerning the type of man wanted from head to toe. One thoughtfully suggests "gallantry in his looks and actions, intelligence, love tech nique well developed, a cosmopoli tan attitude, casualnesa. love of living " "Truthfulness in man is a gocxi sign that they are on the eligible list. Faithfulness follows as a matter of course. High moials and good character are very commend able, and lead tn virtue such qual ities as sincerity. Intelligence (there's Ihe rubi'and ambition. Humor in the spontaneous sece are mentioned as worthy thing V , be foend in a rr.Me. I p,irfllct. AW.r.t;s. appear tt . , h, m --ot to be 1 tContinued on rage Three.) PO GROWTH BOTH CAMPUSES