The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, January 15, 1932, Page TWO, Image 2

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    TWO
The Daily Nebraskan
Station A, Lincoln, Nebraska
OFFICIAL. STUDENT PUBLICATION
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA
Published Tuesday. Wednesday, Thursday, Friday nd
Sunday mornings during ths academlo yssr.
THIRTY-FIRST YEAR
Entered as second-class matter at the postotflce In
Lincoln, Nebraska, under act of congress, March 3, 1879,
and at special rata of postage provided for In section
1103 net of October 3, 191"', authorized January 20, 1922.
Under direction of the Student Publication Board
SUBSCRIPTION RATE
S2 a year Single Copy 8 cents 11.88 a semester
$3 a year mailed 31-75 semester mailed
Editorial Office University Hall 4.
Business Off ice University Hall 4A.
Telephones Day: B-6A91; Night: B-6882, B-3333 (Journal)
Ask for Nebraskan editor.
ICMBERr
193 1
This pap is rapMaraUd for general
advertising by The Nebraska Freas
Aaeoclatloa.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Marvin Von Seggern Editor-in-chief
MANAGING EDITORS
Evelyn Simpson Art Wolf
NEWS EDITORS
Howard AMaway Jack ErlcKSOn
Laurence Hall Joe Ml Her
Murlln Spencer Sports Editor
Berenieca Hoffman Women's Editor
BUSINESS STAFF
" Jack Thompson Business Manager
ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGERS
Norman Galleher Carlyle Sorensen
Bernard Jennings
Students On
The Athletic Board.
The Student Council at its last meeting
heard the report of the delegates to the Na
tional Student Federation association conven
tion -which brought out the fact that most of
the 163 schools represented at the convention
' had some sort of student representation on the
; athletic hoards of control. The University of
Nebraska was among the few schools which
has no such representation. In fact, the Ne
braska delegates to the convention had diffi
culty in making the other delegates understand
that no form of student representation existed
on Nebraska's athletic board.
The Student Council will investigate the
feasibility and the possibility of having a stu
dent on the athletic board. This same thing
was done last spring, but after a long period
of investigation and much effort on the part
of the council's committee, there was still no
student member on the board. Perhaps there
is no need for such a member,, perhaps he
could do nothing if he did sit in on the meet
lings; but nevertheless most colleges and uni
versities deem it advisable to have students on
, their athletic boards, so there may be reasons
for it.
A student representative on the athletic
board, if he could do nothing else, could at
least be a connection link between the students
and the controllers of athletics. He could
carry to the board the student's wishes and de
sires, and could carry back to the students an
explanation of what the board is trying to do,
and what their reaction is to the wishes of the
students. This student representative should
be a member of the student council.
"What objections there can be to this plan
are hard to see. The student would not be in
the way, he Mould not hinder the board from
carrying on their business, but he would be on
hand when needed. Undoubtedly he could be
used, if for nothing else, as an informant to
the student body. In this school where there
is supposed to be some degree of student gov
ernment, there should also be a connection be
tween the students and all of these extracur
ricular things which concern a large percent
of the student body.
But going farther into the matter we learn
that most of those 165 or more schools who
were represented at the recent National Stu
dent Federation convention had students on
their athletic boards not only to sit in and lis
ten, but to have a hand in the formation of
the athletic1 policies of those schools. This
gives the students at least a small say about
the athletics which are supposed to be solely
for their benefit.
"We dinibt very much if a student repre
sentative on the athletic board of control
would actually have much to say about the
athletic policy, but he would be there at any
rate to express the opinions of the students.
Athletics coin-en a large number of students,
not only ihose who take part in the sports,
but tSise who attend the panics as spectators.
The a'hl.tie program is supposed to be car
ried on solely for the benefit of the students,
so it S'-fins almost ridiculous not to have a stu
dent on the athletic hoard.
Endowments
Are ft Great Help.
"With a shortage of funds from which stu
dent loans may be driwn and a retrenchment
program made necessary by a reduced univer
sity budget, the endowment situation at this
institution is too serious to be ignored.
The George "W. Slade estate, from which
funds are to be drawn for student loans next
Vcmcster, forms a basis for what should be a
stinging reminder to University of Nebraska
.students and alumni. Mr. Slade, who had no
children or near relatives who attended the
university, willed his entire estate of $6,400 to
.'Nebraska to be used as the regents saw fit. At
the time of his death he was living in Unadilla,
N. Y., and his only knowledge of this univer
sity and th? work it has been doing came to
him while living on a farm near Albion some
years ago.
; Upon reflection it seems strange that a
man with such remote contacts with
.this university could recognize its needs
so plainly -while alumni of the institu
tion forget its circumstances so completely.
Nearly all universities, the country over, de
pend upon endowments from alumni and
friends for their building funds, loan moneys
and partial running expenses. At Nebraska
the attitude of alumni, possibly through mere
oversight, has been that tax money gives the
university all the aid it needs.
Under present plans of Chancellor Bur
nett and the alumni association a University
Foundation is to be organized within the next
year. This foundation is to be made up of
alumni who will bend their efforts toward se
curing endowments which the university so
greatly needs if it is to attain its deserved rank
in academic standings.
Seniors who leave the university at the
a
er
li
one
lO U11S UIUVCrBliy IU OUpjJUlk llIU J'lupa'-u
University Foundation. In return for what the
UlllVl'Ioiiy Illia givvil uaiu iiiujr diiuuiu tan;
... a . r.t 4 1 iiki tfrtieif it 'o unArla t r tA rl
III Cam! C KfL IHU u hi v vi on J a aivvuij iw
alumni and friends of the institution througl
OUl I lie country 1-"v n uuw piuuitui ta uiiv;
whose solution depends entirely on present and
nnof t.fi,.lniia nf iYia TTnivni-citw nf Wbrnskfl.
In Which We
Ask for Justice.
In the January 14 edition of the Daily Ne
braskan there appeared the announcement of
the engagement of two University ot AcurasKa
students. In today's issue there appears a
story run as a correction m attempted miti
gation of the offense of the inaccurate publi
cation of the day previous.
On the face of it, it would appear only
that through the amateur and probable care
less efforts of some reporter to secure news,
the item was run apparently without verifica
tion or authority. But underneath the surface
of the facts therein lies a tale.
The item, as it happened, was given to
the reporter as recent news by a fraternity
brother of the young man m the case, rear
ing to trust in the absolute veracity of the
statement, (having had similar experiences
previously) the reporter went to another man
of the same organization and asked for verifi
cation which was readily given.
Yesterday morning two embarrassed if not
irate young women phoned the Daily Nebras
kan and asked for a correction. It so hap
pened, however, that the name appeared with
a typographical error, and so the actual injury
to the two young ladies whose name it re
sembled was not so great. But. as we hear so
often, it's the principle of the thing.
The Daily Nebraskan potentially and ac
tually serves as a laboratory for students in
the school of journalism who, as such, are well
cognizant of the fundamental rule of accuracy
regarding the fact of every statement run in
the columns of the sheet. It is to the advant
age of these students, and indeed, is an un
written law which every one of them does his
utmost to observe, that they must have verifi
cation for the things they write for publica
tion. To say the least, then, it is a pill, difficult
indeed to swallow, when they are blamed for
publishing erroneous facts which have been
given them and verified by those persons who
should know. The office of the Daily Nebras
kan has long been known as a gathering place
for various men and women whose knowledge
of campus affairs puts them in a position to
give occasional news tips. It is natural, then,
when a news tip such as that of yesterday is
given to take the informant at his word!
And then, the dawn! Coals of fire are
heaped upon the heads of the innocent staff,
and the misinformed only laugh! Those who
are injured, and others with whom they come
into contact, lose their confidence in the pres
tige of the sheet, and are inclined to look upon
all the matter printed within the columns in a
dubious if not actually suspicious manner.
Would that all students expecting to grad
uate from the institution be required to take
a beginning course in news reporting where
they would be impressed with the value of
accuracy to such a degree that upon giving out
information, they would do so only when such
information is accurate. Such is a journalist's
prayer!
Did you hear about the farmer who planted
his corns and thus put one foot in the grave?
MORNING MAIL
A Critical Critic.
TO THE EDITOR:
Disgusting! Disgusting! This my opin
ion of the all-American water color exhibit
now on display at Morrill Hall. How can they
exhibit such work and invite the students of
this university to visit it? We are supposed
to be here to obtain an education and develop
an appreciation for the finer things in life, and
we are presented with these paintings to aid in
the development of our appreciation of art!
Develop appreciation? Develop disgust!
"Singing colors is the comment attached
to a painting of a garden scene, which looks
like the work of someone who painted wnn
one hand while trying to juggle a ping-pong
ball on the end of a toothpick in the other
hand. Those singing colors remind one of the
"barber shop quartet" staggering home at
four o clock in the morning to the yowling
tunc of "Sweet Adeline."
A cat is the object of another painting in
the collection. It appears to have been 1he vic
tim of infantile paralysis. The comment re
garding this picture informs us that the artist
recently held a "one-man show at the Denver
Art museum." Aft - viewing the painting one
wqnld infer that, possibly, only one man at
tended the "one-man show at Denver."
Another painting it described as "A well
rounded, carefully considered design." It
might be the work of a blind man. A further
comment on the same painting declares that it
"can withstand analysis." It can. There is
nothing to analyze.
"Radiant Sunshine Filtering Through
Trees" is the title of another exhibit. My
first impression of this picture was "Small
pox." I'm glad I was told what it was.
The last painting that I shall mention here,
is, to me, the "masterpiece" of the whole col
lection. "Gay and amusing," "spontaneous in
treatment," and "obvious skill" are all pres
ent in the observation regarding this work. To
be sure it is spontaneous in treatment; the
painter must have had a convulsion when pro
ducing it. The skill is obvious obviously that
of a child in the second grade. This last state
ment is no exaggeration, for the work reminds
one of what children might produce in their
second or third attempts at drawing. The pic
ture is truly "gay and amusing" when one
imagines that it is supposed to be ait.
I don't mean to say, however, that there
were no good paintings, real examples of art.
There were about nine excellent productions,
but there are thirty-nine paintings in the whole
exhibit. The collection is circulated by the
American Federation or Art, and on the whole
it is terrible!
Gutzon Borglum, in his recent lecture
here, said, "America has contributed nothing
to the world in the field of art!" This collec
tion helps to prove it I
AN AKT1ST.
EDUCATIONAL TALKS
Economic and Psychological
Discussions Given By
Authorities.
rvinHnnlnir ths broadcast of edu
cational lecturers on the "Aspects
of the Depression ana r-sycuui
nirv TndRv." tha National Advis
nr rniinr'il nn radio in education
has announced a complete series
or Saturday nignt tains.
Tho Rnppphpa. hv authoritative
prliirnt.nra throughout the country.
are scheduled to continue until
lay 21. Fifty-two stations of the
National Broadcasting company s
network carry the programs.
Double programs each Saturday
nitrht- Inflnrln ft lecture on a tODiC
of economic interest in relation to
the depression from 8:30 to 8:45,
e.s.t., and a second talk over the
same broadcast system from 8:45
until 9 on a topic bearing on mod
ern psychology.
Division neaaings unaer uie
tvnes of talks listed in the an
nouncement, are "Roads to Eco
nomic Recovery," and "New So
cial Responsibilities" under the
general topic oi Aspctia ui wo
nnnrnsKi ' while "Our Changing
Personalities," "Animal Behavior,"
"Psychology of Education ana
"Psychology ana inausiry are ine
tnnin division heads under the sren-
eral topic, "Psychology Today."
The talk on economics scneumeu
frr this Snturdav eveniner is "The
Tariff in Relation to Prosperity."
It will be given by Ernest M. Pat
terson, professor of economics at
the University of Pennsylvania.
"How to Grow a Personality" is
the title of the psychology speech
booked for this week. John B.
Wntsnn of the J. Walter Thomp
son company will deliver the ad
dress.
Pamphlets explanatory to the
series have been published by the
radio education council. They
may be secured at cost from tne
University of Chicago Press, oiu
Ellis Ave., Chicago, 111.
"Many members of the radio au
dience," the announcement ex
pair.s, 'have found that they enjoy
the broadcasts more and learn
more about the subject under dis
cussion if they read the printed
material prepared especially to ac
company this series."
The program now Deing oruau
cast is the first educationa series
of its tvpe ever, ararnged for a
nationwide audience. Additional
lecture topics will be announced in
the Daiy Nebraskan from time to
time.
The Growler
BY HARRY FOSTER.
Frntpmities have fallen down in
their duty toward the university,
men in their ranks and the na-
ional organization. The duty re
erred to is the observance of the
ulcs and regulations set forth by
th imivprsitv. Most fraternities
have a national rule that demands
that the chapters of that organiza-
ion comply v.un me laws oi
:ollege where it exists.
Fiftv-seven men have been ini
tiated into twenty fraternities dur
ing the last year and a half with
out the consent and approval of
the dean"s office. Many of these
men were initiated before the pres
ent rule went into effect, which
makes it a case of ipso facto.
Fraternities are an important
cog in the educational system.
Vast opportunities are offered to
those within the ranks. Those that
do not belong to them are handi
capped. If fraternities fulfilled
their duty mid grasped the possi
bilities for education that oppor
tunity affords, fraternities would
not only be justified but would be
as important to the scene of edu
cation as U.o college itself.
To teach men how to live to
gether and how to co-operate. To
sponsor scholarship and character.
To cultivate religious fidelity and
to exemplify the teachings of
Christ in the formation of a
brotherhood. This and other op
portunities the fraternity has.
Fraternities in the violation of a
university regulation have fallen
down in an important phase of
their work. Fraternities should
cultivate adnerence to laws. They
make the freshman obey their own
decrees. Discipline is a part of
any training. Kelt discipline is the
most imponani pait of discipline.
We hope that fraternities will
not only continue but will make a
serious effort to strive for the
ideals that are inculcated in the
bpiiit of the fraternity.
I have been asked bo many times
to reveal the whereabouts of the
brown derby of the law school that
I have decided that I will at last
comply with this request. Go to
the Stuart. A man on the stage
comes out and tries to be as funny
as "Gus" was in the Delt act at
the Kosmet Revue. He's the man
in the brown derby. If you don't
think that this is the law bowler
go up and ask him. If he denies
it get a writ of corpus delecti and
demurer. If you can't find It there
go over to the Engineering college.
Walk five paces east by east from
the front steps, then turn north by
north for five paces, to the rear
march for five paces and then
pivot and go west young man, go
west for five paces. This brings
you to where you started from.
If you are a good lawyer you can
figure that out.
SOCIETY
Round of Formals, House Parties
And Dinner Dances Fill Week-End
Acacia and Pi Kappa Phi Will Be Hosts at Dinner
Parties Before Formals. Alpha Phi and
Kappa Delta Issue Party Bids.
The week end will be active before the lull of examination
week. Friday evening the Kappa Delta formal will be hold
at the Cornhusker hotel. House parties scheduled for that
evening are the Pi Kappa Phi dinner dance winch is being
given for the members by their house mother. There will also
be a Methodist student party at the Trinity church. Saturday
evening Acacia will entertain at a dinner dance at the Corn
husker, which will be followed by a representative dance at the
Shrine club. Alhpa Gamma Kho, Omega Beta Ti and Delta
Sigma Phi will hold house dances. There will be an Ag mixer
at the Student Activities building and a formal given at the
Cornhusker by the Alpha Phi's.
Acacia Gives
rr iff i ci m f j .
Hcacia will give a winter party
in the form of a formal dinner
rinnef Satiirriav eveninsr. At 7
o'clock a dinner dance will be held
at the Cornhusker hotel. Eddie
Jungbluth and his orchestra will
play for the dancing there and at
therepresentative dance which will
follow at tne snrine country ciud
Friday, Jan. 15.
12:00 American Society of Me
chanical Engineers.
12:15 Physical education club.
12:30 Debate team and Delta
Two hundred couples have been S16ma
hidden to the dance which will be
gin at 9:30 o'clock. The chaperones
will be Mr. and Mrs. Kan Ken, Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Weir, and Mrs. W. A.
Brown, house mother.
Kappa Delta Will
Give Formal Dance.
inree nunarea coupiea win oi- mitee
tend the formal dance which will c-
be given by members of Kappa
Delta at the Cornhusker hotel Fri
day evening. Chaperones for the
affair will be Mr. and Mrs. Gayle
C. Walker, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Coch
ran, and the housemother Mrs.
Anna Marsh.
Formal Given
By Alpha Phi.
A formal will be given Dy Aipna
Phi Saturday evening at the Corn
husker ballroom. The chaperones
will be Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Sway-
zee, Mr. and Mrs. Karl N. Arndt,
and Mrs. O. C. Anderson, housemother.
Alpha Gamma Rho
Entertain at Party.
Alpha Gamma Rho will enter
tain at a house dance Saturday
evening at which Helen Hampton
and her orchestra will play. The
chaperones will be Mr. and Mrs.
J. P. Pierson, and Mr. and Mrs. Ed
J. Janike.
House Party Given
By Omega Beta Pi.
A house D&rtv will be sriven oy
Ompfft Beta Pi this Saturday eve
ning. The chaperones for the party
will be Mr. and Mrs. n. t,. jow,
and Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Laymon.
Harold Hinds and his orchestra
will play.
Delta Sig Plan
Party Saturday.
Delta Sigma fni nave pi&nneu a
house party for Saturday evening.
Harold Jones and his orchestra will
play for the dancing. The chaper
ones will be Air. ana jvirs. nuay
Voeeler, and Mr. and Mrs. Hermn
Decker.
ig Mixer To Be
Given Saturday.
The agriculture engineers wm
sponsor the Ag Mixer which will
be held Saturday evening in the
Student Activities building. The
flnlHpnrnH sprnflriers will Dlav for
the dancing. The chaperones will
be Mr. ana Mrs. n;. u. ixiwis, iar,
and Mrs. E. E. Brackett and Mr.
and Mrs. O. K. Trenary
Methodist Students
To Give Party.
There will be a Methodist stu
dent nartv at he Trinity M. E.
church Friday evening from 7 to
11 oclolk. The cnaperones win De
the Rev. and Mrs. W. C. Fawell
and Dr. and Mrs. H. P. Murdick.
Delta llpsilon
Elects Officers.
Delta Upsilon elected their new
officers for the coming semester.
Thpy are Arnold Johnson, Shen
nadoah, la., president; Robert
Venner, Lincoln, vice president;
John Turner, Lincoln, recording
secretary, and Leslie Rood, Om
aha, corresponding secretary.
Oda Vermillion
Announces Engagement.
An informal announcement was
made of the engagement of Oda
Vermillion, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. C. D. Vermillion of Tescott,
Kas., to Henry Klosterman of
Ulysses. Miss Vermillion is presi
dent of Phi Omega Pi and Mr.
Klosterman is a member of Alpha
Gamma Rho. No date has been set
for the wedding.
The informal engagement of
John Hansen of Lincoln was erron
eously announced yesterday in the
Daily INeDrasKan one to a. itnier
nlty prank.
WISCONSIN NOT
"SONG CONSCIOUS"
Wisconsin, for all its song being
used with substituted words by
so many other schools, is not "song
conscious" according to Major E.
W. Murphy, director of the uni
versity band.
AT THE STUDIO.
Monday, Jan. 18.
12 :00 Intramural representa
tives. 12:15 Sigma Delta (pledges
and members.)
Tuesday, Jan. 19.
12:00 Military ball committee.
Wednesday. Jan. 20.
12:00 Interfratcrnity ball corn-
Thursday, Jan. 21.
12:00 Delta Sigma Pi.
a
Second Semester Class Feb. 1
Complete courses In accounting, shorthand and executive
secretarial. .
Plan now a course that will lead to direct and practical
results.
Call or phone
LINCOLN SCHOOL OF COMMERCE
Member Nat'l Ast'n of AccrditeJ Cm'l tsWa
p 4, 14th ... " ; Lincoln, Nsbr.
by
GERALD BAR DO
t
TREND OF THE
TIMES
r
Miss Madeline Slade was once
of London society, is the daughter
of a British admiral, xoaay sne is
a devoted disciple of India's Ma
hatma Gandhi. When arrested ho
told her to do nothing that would
warrant her arrest, but now sne
is publically urging civil disobedience.
The Clothes Line
For the first nine months of last
year $30,066,641 in public and pri
vate charities was given in fifty
six cities for relief of unfortunate
families.
Europe will miss its "peace
maker." Veteran foreign minister
of France, Aristide Briand, will
retire on his farm at Cocherel in
Normandy.
No wonder United States has
said nothing since Chancellor
Bruening said Germany would be
unable to meet reparations after
the moratorium year. Secretary
Stimson said Wednesday that he
did not expect to send an Ameri
can observer to the Lausanne re
parations conference this month.
Premier Mussolini is not quiet.
He reaffirmed Wednesday that
cancelation of reparations Is the
first step to the world's economic
recovery.
Premier Mussolini is not quiet.
He reaffirmed Wednesday that
cancelation of reparations is me
first step to t he world's economic
recovery.
The Honolulu chamber of com
merce is insisting of Gov. Law
rence M. Judd that a "clean-up"
be made. If not they threaten to
"go past local authorities and ask
Washington for relief."
Both Japanese and Chinese gov
ernments have notified Aristide
Briand, as president of the League
of Nations council, that they ac
cept the nominees to the inquiry
commission appointed by the
league to conduct an investigation
in Manchuria. N. Y. Times.
Senator Bingham and others
who contend that 4 percent beer
would aid unemployment can now
determine to what extent they
were right. The greatest figure
ever was 86.814 employed at beer
makir.r in 1914. Would be help
ful to have the figures of those
now botr making.
Imagine a flying boat twice the
size of the German Do-X. The
technical details and plan of this
huge flyer are now in public in
Amsterdam. Its total flying weight
will be 100 tons. It will carry 200
passengers.
"My loyal and entire support" to
Mr. Hoover are the words of
Charles G. Dawes. That he re
signed as Ambassador to Great
Britain to seek a candidacy for
the presidency has evidently been
idle talk.
UNITARIAN CHURCH
12th and H Street
Arthur L. Weatherly, Mlnliter
The Church Without a Creed
Not th Truth, but the search
for Truth
Sunday, Jan. 17 What Is the Fu
ture of the Rare Problem in
the United States?
January Special
One Pair
Qloves Cleaned
FREE
With each dress sent to
be cleaned and pressed
during January we
will clean one pair of
gloves free.
Call F2377
Modern Cleaners
SOUKUP A WESTOVER
More snow and still mora
snow; Is there no end? Enoughs
enough. Much as we adore these
slaying sleighing parties that
everyone's having, and beautiful
as the campus looks with all its
ugliness hidden under a blanket of
snow, still, this eternal and ever
lasting snow is beginning to wear
on our nerves.
Spring may be just around the
corner, (oh, yeah!) but it has al
ready arrived at the Band Box
Millinery. The blizzard blew us in
there the other afternoon, and
what a sight for sore eyes eyes
that have looked upon nothing but
the blank monotony or snow for
days and days! Such vibrant
colors as Nassau blue, Lido red,
and Jadestone green we saw in
cunning close fitting hats of crys
talline and charmuse, priced at $3
and $5. Just the right touch. of
color to top the fur coat and
what a new hat won't do for the
disposition! In one of these ex
clusive styles insured by the Band
Box, you'll feel like a new woman.
Other encouraging signs that
yes, spring is coming, keep drift
ing across from Paris, where the
Powers That Be have put their
heads together to .decide what the
well dressed woman will wear this
forth-coming season. Here's what
they say.
Waistlines are mounting higher
and higher. Take a very wide sash
and wrap it around your ribs, and
you will have the effect. This
lalsed waistline is the most im
portant change in the silhouette.
There will be a soften effect
around the neckline of the new
frocks.
Bows, and still more bows, will
contribute the softening touch. A
loose knot of white crepe may
lighten your dark dress of crinkly
crepe; a tiny twist of white pique
may appear at the neckline of a
woolen frock. And now for tome
thing new. We've had the cat's
meow, t he cat's pajamas, and
now make way for the cat's whisk
ers, which is a long, stiff ended
bow of white pique that ties at the
neck. From these bows you'll have
to decide which will be your best.
Corduroy is given approval by
Paris, which should delight those
coeds who already have frocks of
that fabric. The newest note will
be blond corduroy, that is about
the color of the trousers that the
B. M. O. C. affect. Wonder if they
will resent our adopting their fa
vorite to our own uses?
Four Classes Entertain
Pharmaceutical Group
Members of each of the foue
classes presented a short program
at a meeting of the Pharmaceuti
cal club last night In the Grand ho
tel. In addition, music was fur
nished by a group of pharmacy
students.
Those on the program included
James Dille, Blank Gibbono.
Charles Bryant, Earl Kline, Blank
Kuncle, Nina Goldstein, Pat Pat
terson, Ray Schoening and Paul
Foye.
Students Discuss Plans
For Disarmament Talks
Nine students met Thursday
noon at the Temple cafeteria to
discuss plans for a series of dis
armament speeches to be given
during the remainder of the year.
The plan is to have each student
discuss some phase of the disarm
ament situation before the group,
3nd later present it before an out
side group- Another meeting baa
been scheduled by Meredith Nel
son, chairman of the movement,
for February 4th.
MAY CHANGE STANFORD
ORGANIZATION.
Stanford university faculty
members will vote soon in a post
card poll sponsored by the Palo
Alto Times to determine their at
titude on dropping the lower divi
sion of the university and trans
forming Stanford into a graduate
school.
Anytime
for
Everytime
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TWELVE - TWELVE O
4
end of the semester and next spring owe it
is-