The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 26, 1937, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    0
CbwancL
and
Obout
Daily
1
Official Student Newspaper of the University of Nebraska
lly
Sarah
Meyer
YOE. XXXVI NO. 95.
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1937.
PRICE 5 CENTS
Union Charter Receives Initial Approval
r
feBRASKAN
I IT If Vt
H H
JJJF
I
1 :
.I
4.
An En si Sil lwnig
Ami a Squeaking Stand
John T. Flynn certainly "packed
'cm in" Ht the convocation in the
Temple Thursday morning;, to use
a (rod old box office term. Not
only was every seat in the audi
torium filled, but there were many
KtBiulinc or sittine in the aisles.
Collegiate faces seemed in the !
minority among the countenances
of faculty and townspeople, al
though at times we could scarcely
hear the speaker from our third
row seat for the gliding of student
pencils.
When we remarked to Chan
cellor Burnett that we hoped
tome day they might have a
meeting hall adequate for such
convocation crowds he reminded
ua that there are several other
things which must come first,
such as a library. Which is
only too true. But a minor
situation we must press. Couldn't
something be done, powers that
be, about the squeeking speak
er's stand? Every time Econo
mist Flynn made a weighty
point about getting something
to work, the stand complained
feelingly.
But despite such petty conspir
acies to distract the minds of
listeners, we found the audience
highly attentive and appreciative.
And paradoxically our irreverent
mind was reminded of Dr. Jen
ness' concepts of the why of class
room achievement or lack of it.
students in the first row he
claims, have poor scholarship in
a class because they have no
one in front of them. Students
in the back row get poor grades
because there are too many people
in front of them, and they may
indulge freely their sociability.
But students in the second row
earn high marks: from their vant
age point they get the impression
of universality.
The "Indian Summer" of La
Parker:
"In youth, it was a way I had
To do my best to please,
And change, with every passing
lad,
To suit his theories.
But now I know the things I
know
And do the things I do;
And if you do not like me so,
To hell, my love, with you!"
Little by little more and more
girls are admitting to attendance
at and enjoyment of rassling.
I3AvViaT-.a it's Ha 4Vi11 Via
suspicion that your neighbors at
the matches "will probably stick
a knife in your back at the
slightest provocation." Perhaps
the animalistic proceedings in the
.
ring serve as an outlet for the
beast that lurks below the surface
of every man AND woman. At
all events, numbers find the antics
of the grunt and groan gents fun
to behold.
Any profesional athlete js a
pastmaster of the art of putting I
on a swell show. That'. "what
the public pays to see. The
trouble with too many of the burly
bovs is that thev aren't smart j
about picking their spots. And
so the Federal Trade Commission
was let in on one of the most
wild-eyed cases these myoptic
eyes have ever seen in print when
a group of muscle makers ex
hibited their wares. "Time" gives
this account of the hearing:
"Peeling off their shirts and
undershirts in a hearing room
in Washington one day, a prime
collection of mighty muscled
"weightlifters offered their prow
ess and appearance as evidence
in proceedings against Robert
Collins Hoffman, a strapping
York, Pa., body lover who sells
male muscle in the form of les
sons, bar bells and a magazine
called "Strength and Health."
Mr. Hoffman had been cited by
the commission for unfair com
petition with his rivals 'n the
muscle making industry...
"To justify his claims, Mr. Hoff
man last week took his stable of
champion strongmen to Washing
ton. One strongman. . -can perform
the unduplicated feat of hand bal
ancing on ten Indian clubs. Once
upon the clubs, he dropped them
two by two until his weight rested
on four clubs thru his thumbs and
fingers . . .
"Bob Mitchell, whose specialty
is letting a Ford truck run over
his stomach, did not have facili
ties for that exhibition last week,
but he showed Examiner Hall
how to get into the crab position
from flat on his back with a
man on his stomach. At one
point Terlazzo (Olympic world
championship featherweight
lifter) and Mitchell leaped on
the table, kicked aside the briefs,
put on a muscle dance. Mr. Hoff
man, not to be outdone, stood on
Ms thumbs."
John Teter Scnning says the
students around here have been
on a "sit-down" strike for years."
The National Geographic society
la very proud, and justifiably so,
of the many fields of scentific en
deavor in which it has pioneered.
It's list of "first" achievements is
enviable indeed. And so we were
interested mightily in its public
ized "first rolored statosphere
picture."
Breathes there a man with soul
so dead that he has never dreamed
of how Mother Earth must look
from wav. way up. The airplane
topographical shots are always the I Dean Ferguson and Prof. Haney
most bethumbed in a geography, i eft Lincoln last Tuesday and ex
as are the photographs of the sur-. pert to return sometime late Sun
t Continued on Tage 3 day night.
MORTAR
BOARDS
PLAN SCHOLASTIC
IE
Honorary to Entertain 475
Women Students at
Event Feb. 28.
Approximately 475 women stu
dents will be guests of Mortar
Board, senior women's honorary,
at their annual'soholarshlp tea to
be held Sunday afternoon, Feb. 28,
from 3 to 5 o'clock in Ellen Smith
hall. Invitations to the affair were
extended by the honorary to wom
en who have an 80 average, are
carrying 12 hours during the pres
ent semester, and who have 27
hours credit for two previous se
mesters. As a special feature of the aft
ernoon's program, a scholarship
plaque will be awarded to the se
nior girl in the university who has
maintained for three years a rec
ord of achievement in scholarship,
leadership, and service to the uni
versity. At the same time, honor
able mention will be awarded to
two runnerups.
Faculty and honorary members
who will be present at the tea as
special guests are: Miss Margaret
Fedde, Miss Pauline Gellatly. Dr.
Edna Schrick, Miss Kate Field,
Miss Amanda Heppner, Miss H.
Alice Howell, Miss Mabel Hays,
Miss Mabel Lee, Miss Florence
McGahev, Miss Marguerite Mc
Phee, Miss Elsie Ford Piper. Mrs.
Elizabeth Thompson. Dr. Elda
Walker, Mrs. Hattie Plum .Wil
liams. Mrs. Fred Williams, Mrs.
Ada Westover. Dr. Clare Wilson,
Miss Louise Pound, Miss Eliza
Gamble, Miss Lenore Alway. Miss
Nellie Eastburn, Miss Matilda
Shelby, Miss Frances Drake. Miss
Eleanora Miller, Mrs. C. F. Ladd,
Miss Olivia Pound and Miss Sarah
T. Muir.
TO
Mrs. L. Williams to Offer
Dancing Lessons in
Armory.
, , Oncers will again trod the
i1 toi th ar"lor V w s
J ?:30 henthe barb A.W.S.
JJJ
ul u'1' " vT" " "VT
atnAnlc TTfr tnncrt U'tlrt WISH IT..
students.
Mrs. Luella Williams, dance in
structor, will conduct lessons dur
ing part of the first hour.
"Hour dances for unaffiliates
are so much in demand that the
board plans to continue them
ulr ':,","
?nf- ?Cf .$ Ja? iv
barb "eJeJ j l the
e worthwhile because of the
cance l.h7 o student to meet
oiner siuoems mc.Y orion- oh
only on campus sidewalks."
Tonight s lessons ottered Dy Mrs.
Williams will merely continue the
fundamental steps of ballroom
dancing, but will increase in diffi
cult' at each hour dance, until
special steps will be introduced.
Elizabeth Edison and Mary Bird,
members of the board, are in
charge of the hour dance. Admis
sion will be ten cents. Chaperons
for the social dance will be Pro
fessor and Mrs. G. L. Peltier and
Professor and Mrs. A. A. Luebs.
'life" stimtates
public: intekest
in .news rum HE
"Life," it appeais. is setting an
example.
The weekly pic ture publication,
which is being received everywhere
with increasing acclaim, has stim
ulated interest in pictorial journal
ism. The latest result of renewed in
terest is the statement by Warren
Novak, student in the Municipal
University of Omaha, that he
would this week begin publication
of a bi-monthly picture magazine,
"The Kandid Keyhole."
The pictorial re-view of univer
sity life, inside and out" will vie
for student attention with the
"Gfteway," the university's week
ly newspaper.
When "Gateway" Editor P.uth
Brehman substiutted for the gossip
column, "The Keyhole." a column
entitled "Around the Campus."
dealing with university matters of
a serious nature, Novak decided
that some agency must cany on
the lighter side of student life.
Dean Ferguson, Haney
Serve On Engineering
Examining Committee
Dean O. J. Ferguson and Prof.
J. W. Haney, of the college of en
gineering are in South Dakota this
week as members on the examina
tion committee of the Engineering
Council for Professional Develop
ment. The committee is examining the
engineering college of South Da
kota State university at Brook
ings, and also the South Dakota
School of Mines at Kspid city.
A FOR SUNDAY
HOURDANCETONiGHT
Flynn Questions Federal Borrowing;
Asks Reform of Corporate Control
Economist Proposes a High
Tax on "Saved Dollar"
to Finance Plan.
Exposing inefficiencies in our
administrative system of govern
ment borrowing and leveling a
scalding attack on corporate ex
ploitation which have effected a
delusive sham of Industrial recov
ery, John T. Flynn culminated his
convocation address Thursday
morning by proposing indefinite
solution of income taxation and
corporation control to rescue a de
ficient democratic order from the
financial decay that awaits it.
In his two fold discussion of
"Recovery or Delusion," the visit
ing economist, journalist and au
thor reflected the industrial con
valescence we are experiencing to
day, as viewed thru the revealing
lens of the economist's microscope.
Later he shifted fire to the "mon
strous economic machine gun"
that our legalized corporations
have become, but was conveniently
saved by the bell so far as any
possible solution to matter was
concerned.
"We Have Got Recovery."
"We are supposed to have recov
ery, and we have got recovery,"
Flynn began in his distinctive east
side accent. Once more we talk in
terms of billions of dollars, and
ENGINEERS APPOINT
DEPARTMENT HEADS
P. Burns. General Chairman,
Announces Leaders of
Exhibitions.
In order that plans and every
detail for Engineers Week which
will be held the first week of May.
appointments of those who will
head various departments in ar
ranging for the prominent affair
were made yesterday. Pete Burns,
general chairman for the week,
made the appointments.
Those who will head their re
spective departments are as
follows:
Sledcr
Runqnel
Fi-M !...
Pro it nun . . . .
(Vinvomtlnn.
lohn X1-Tolr
. . harlfn Mlnnirk
. . Hprbrrt Rrlrhrrt
.1.414411 Nfniripyrr
John l'arkT
PnMlrltj . . .
Harry l.np.lnn
Window Dinplusn Krnnrth lark
Trafflr ninld Kuska
Tirkrt Sale Harold Hatwr
ampin stnirturr Pick il-man
Ribbon Nalrt I'anl i.afnlilln
onti-M Manar fclrmr lausarn
Selected on a basis of their par
ticipation in activities both in
their own departments and in
Engineering college as a whole,
these men will have entire charge
of Engineers' Week. More specific
arrangements will be announced at
a later date.
Another trophy, with the trophy
presented to the Engineering
school winning the field day
(Continued on Page 4.)
JUDGE B, H. PAINE SPEAKS
ON 'WASHINGTON, LINCOLN'
Ag Students Hear Speech by
Justice of State Supreme
Court.
tlrguig students to make the
best possible use of their educa
tional possibilities. Judge Bayard
H. Paine, of the Nebraska State
Supreme Court, reviewed briefly
the lives of Lincoln and Wash
ington at an All Agricultural coll
ege convocation Thursday after
noon in Ag hall.
Comparing and contrasting the
lives of the two great American
statesmen. Judge Paine, whose
hobby is organizing and making
speeches, challenged the students
to apply their natural abilities as
Abraham Lincoln did, in order to
lead successful lives. "With the
addition of higher education to
day" Judge Paine stated." every
man and woman has an equal
chance to make a name for him
or herself in the world.
Frances Schmidt introduced the
speaker of the afternoon to the
gathering of 150 Agricultural
college students.
CHURCH TO PRESENT,
THREE ACT COMEDY
Methodic Student Stage
'Marrying Anne? Play
This Evening.
"Marrying Anne?" is the title
for the three act play to be given
by the student group of the Trin
ity Methodist church, 18th and A,
Friday evening. February 26, at
7:45 o'clock.
The play which is being pro
duced under the direction of Mrs.
Robert B. Slaughter, is a comedy
involving many humorous situa
tions brought about by the attempt
of an elderly gentleman to marry
off his grand-daughter who insists
on being too modern to let a
grand-parent dictate her marriage.
Proceeds from the performance
are to be used for buying stage
equipment.
o-
SALIENT POINTS
OF FLYNN SPEECH
1. We have recovery but it is
unwholesome.
2. Relief dollar becomes a
spending dollar and eventually
a non-circulating "saved" dol
lar. 3. English precedent dictates
the taxing of the "saved" dollar,
4. The accumulated federal
debt will never be paid,
5. Unscrupulous use of the
corporation as an economic ma
chine gun suggests need of fed
eral regulation.
6. We must reform the demo
cratic system rather than resort
to communism or collectivism.
heap praise on the shoulders of a
great president as the wheels of
production gain momentum," he de
clared. As business men we recog
nize this recovery in the form of
j a more lucrative income, and re
joice at it, "but as citizens of a
'great republic, desirous of making
j it work, we want to be realistic
; about it."
! If one studies the situation
j closely, he will find that one of
j the fundamental requisites of re
I covery is long time investments,
; the visitor informed. "When fresh
funds flow into our system and
! continue to flow, we have recov-
OUPONT MEETS SENIORS
Personnel Manager Comes
j Here for Interviews.
E. F. DuPont, personnel man
ager of the DuPont company in
Wilmington, Delaware, spent the.
entire day Wednesday in Lincoln
interviewing students of the uni
versity. Among the twenty or so
individuals who Mr. DuPont met
and talked with were graduate
students who are candidates for
Ph. D. degrees and Master degrees
this year, seniors in chemical
engineering, and seniors graduat
ing with a major in chemistry.
IP L
Pi
Lambda Theta Offers
Aid to Students With
High Averages.
Pi Lambda Thcta loans, rar.g
i ing from $2U0 to $1,000, are now
I available to worthy students with
!high scholastic standing and limit-
ed financial resources.
According to information re
ceived from the national offices
of the women's honorary educa
tional sorority, both men and wom
en may apply. Juniors, seniors,
and graduate students are eligible,
but preference will be shown to
women graduate students. Appli
cants must be studying in the gen
eral field of education, but not
necessarily with a major in educa
tion or with teaching as their in
tended profession.
Applicants must be able to offer
some security for the loan. Re
payments on the loans are to be
gin Jan. 1. following the close of
the school year for which the stu
dent received the final loan. In
terest charges, less than 5 per
cent annum, will begin from the
date of the loan and will be pay
able at half year intervals or
monthly installments, correspond
ing to the plan accepted for re
payment. All inquiries relative to Pi
Lambda Theta loans are to be ad
dressed to Mrs. Kathryn Williams,
executive secretary, Haverford
Court., Haverford. Pa.
MARGIE DEE HEADS FEATURE
LIST OF WEEKS' PROM BAND
Pretty Songstress Gives Up
' Stage for Career of
Vocalizing.
' lnht-ntaiice plays a gieat part
in the lives of each and every one
of us. and has applied itself with
j no uncertain force in the case of
j Margie Dee, featured vocalist with
I Anson Weeks and his orchestra
; which comes to Lincoln on March
i 6 for the Junior-Senior prom.
I Margie Dee inherited from her
j forebearers on her mother's side
I a love for music which is at least
beginning to assert itself, but it
was not music with which Margie,
however, wanted to win for her
self a place in the entertainment
world.
As a child, she had always
wanted to be an actress and as
she grew up this yearning became
even stronger when she played
leading roles in high school pro
ductions, which won her ranking
as the best high school actress in
the state of Oklahoma for two
successive years. It was purely by
chance that she went in for singing-,
and it was this chance alone
that brought her to the attention
of the portly Anson Weeks
Shakespearean Actress.
As it happened, Margie was ap
pearing on the radio in a drama
! Must Make Economic Order
Work to Remedy Ills
of Democracy.
cry. Now we have recovery in this
country, but singularly, we haven't
got the long credit." We create
new I. O. U.'s, he declared.
Uncle Sam Foots the Bill.
In answer to a self directed
question as to where the recovery
we are enjoying today is coming
from, the gray haired economist
raised himself to his toes with the
assistance of a creaking stand,
and replied: "It is coming from
long term borrowing and spend
ing. But the borrowing has been
done by our good old Uncle Sam."
In the last four years the. federal
government has assumed respon
sibility for a debt of 14'2 billion
dollars borrowed from commercial
banks, to be used for relief pur
poses. Within a short time this entire
sum will have returned to the cof
fers of the capitalistic few from
whom it was borrowed, and we
will have nothing more than a cor
pulent national debt to show for
present recovery. "That in my
humble judgment, is not a whole
some recovery. The system itself
is on the dole until we can func
( Continued on Page 4.)
FEATURES WORK OF
THREE NEBRASKA!
Writings by Instructors
Albrecht, Johnson to
Appear in Issue.
The February issue of the
Prairie Schooner, which is to make
its appearance in a few days, con
tains outstanding articles by three
Nebraska writers. Two of the
three authors are instructors in
the university.
One of the most unusual fea
tures is an article by Erich Al
brecht, instructor in the German
department, entitled "A Heart
Without a Country." In his letter,
Mr. Albrecht deplores the lack of
emotionalism in America in com
parison with the open emotional
ism one finds in the German peo
ple. He writes that Americans are
emotionally starved.
Maurice Johnson, instructor in
English, surveys th accomplish
ments of the Prairie Schooner for
the past ten years. The paper is
a general survey of the Prairie
Schooner covering outstanding
(Continued on Page 4.)
TRACTOR
SENDS
COMPANY
SUPERVISOR
j CroM ell of Peoria Firm
I To Interview M. E.
Seniors.
J. P. Crowell, supervisor of plant
training at the Caterpillar Tractor
company in Peoria, 111., will be at
the university Tuesday. March 2,
to interview mechanical engineer
ing students who might be inter
ested in obtaining work with this
company.
The corporation is offering a two
year graduate apprenticeship
course covering assembly lines,
laboratories, heat treatment, foun
dry, pattern ship, offices, and test
forms. All students interested
should make appointments at once
in Prof. Haney's office in me
chanical engineering hall room
203.
tized version of one of Shake
speare's works, and the production
manager finding that the skit ran
short about three minutes, mo
tioned to Margie to do something.
! Since Margie had just learned the
words to a new popular song, she
j hurriedly motioned to the staff
pianist to sit down at the piano
I and play the song while she
I sang it.
By a further coincidence Anson
Weeks, who happened to be tour
ing in the vicinity of Oklahoma
City, had his radio tuned in to the
same station and upon hearing
Margie's voice ring out clearly
thru the ether waves, decided to
investigate her for the possibility
of singing with his orchestra.
Makes Debut at Home.
The investigation proving suc
cessful. Margie made her song
stylist debut right in her own back
yard as it were, at Spring Lake
in Oklahoma City, where Weeks
played a limited engagement last
summer. Since then, her popular
ity has skyrocketed to a great
height and her appearance with
Anson Weeks' orchestra is incen
tive enough to travel miles to see
and hear the popular songstress.
Also featured in the Weeks or
chestra is the diminutive Frankie
Sanuto. guitarist and novelty en-
jtertainer de luxe, who standi in
j (Continued on Page 4.)
Ifp
; If r
MARGIE DEE
Featured Vocalist With
Anson Weeks and Bis Orchestra
JACK ELSON 10 PLAY
AT R.O.T.C.
E
Cadet Officers to Attend
Affair as Special
Guests.
Music of Jack Elson and his or
chestra will be featured on Sat
urday afternoon, Feb. 27. when
members of the R. O. T. C. spon
sors organization honor officers of
the Nebraska cadet corps at a
tea dance-from 3 to 5:30 o'clock
at the Cornhusker hotel.
According to plans revealed by
Mary Yoder, honorary colonel and
president of the sponsors' organi
zation, presidents and social chair
men of organized women's houses
and sponsors of last year's military
units will also attend the affair as
special guests. In addition to
these, approximately 100 women
recognized as leaders in campus
activities will be present.
Expressing her hope that cadet
officers and sponsors will make
definite plans to attend the tea
dance, Miss Yoder commented,
Tlans for the dance are complete
and from present indications we
are hoping to make this year's
afair unusually successful. Because
of this we are anxious that those
invited make a special effort to
attend the event on Saturday aft
ernoon." Committees which have been
working on arrangements for the
affair include: General committee,
Marian Holland, chairman: Betty
Van Horn, June Butler and Vir
ginia Foster; room committee,
Jean Doty, chairman: Eetty How
land and Muriel Krasne; food com
mitee Marjorie Bannister, chair
man: Betty Widener and Pet Lahr;
orchestra, Ruth Thygeson. chair
man; Irene Sellers and Dorothy
Chapelow; invitations, Virginia
Anderson, chairman; Jane Brack
ett and Jane Walcott.
L
Nebraska Dean Publishes
First Issue of Drug
Quarterly.
Dr. Kufus A. Lyman. kaa of
the college of pharmacy, as editor
of the American Journal of
Pharmaceutical Education. re
cently published the first issue of
his magazine. It is a journal of
the American Association of
Colleges of Pharmacy and is pub
lished every three months by that
organization.
At the last meeting held at
Dallas Tex., the society decided to
publish quarterly a journal of its
activities and selected Doctor Ly
man as the editor of it. Doctor
Lyman is also a member of the
executive committee of the associ
ation of which 55 institutions are
members. Included in the first
number of th journal were the
reports of the national convention,
an article in memory of the late
Dr. Theodore Bradley who was
president of the association at the
time of lus death, as well as num
erous other articles dealing with
questions of cuirent interest in the
field of pharmaceutical education.
Student Interested
in Theological Work
May Meet W ilh Leslie
Dr. Elmer A Leslie, professor of
Hebrew, and Old Testament at the
Boston University School of The
ology, is to be on the .Nebraska
campus March 6 and 7 to confer
with students that are planning
for a ministerial career or for any
other branch of full time church
work.
Conferences with Dr. Leslie may
be arranged with Rev. P-obert E.
Drey at snv time during the com
ing Wet-k for the hours that the
visiting ecclesiastic is not engaged
in addressing young people's
groups.
1
STUDENT
BOARD
STAMPS
FAVOR
ON CONSTITUTION
Faculty, Regents, Alumni
Association to View
New Document.
Coincident with the beginning of
excavation for Nebraska's em
bryonic Student Union building
this week, members of the special
student council committee met.
yesterday afternoon to discuss the
provisions of the first tentative
drsft of the building's constitu
tion. Before the document can be sub
mitted to the student council for
approval, it must be considered
and accepted by representatives of
the faculty, the Alumni associa
tion, and the Board of Regents.
When it has received the recom
mendation of these three bodies, it
will be returned to the commit
tee and submitted to the council.
Liberal Document.
Altho provisions of the constitu-
tion have been withheld until it is
in final form for submission to the
council, Marylu Petersen, commit
tee chairman, declared that it was
a liberal document and should
meet with the entire approval of
the student body.
Miss Petersen and Arnold Le
(ConUnued on Page 2.)
statearTsociety
opens 47th exhibit
Show Paintings by Leading
j Prize Winning Artists
! of Country.
' Following a custom that is in its
! . - .. - 4U VhrQcVa Art
UI ,--rtI, l'1 . , v .... - - - -
association will open its annual art
exhibit Sunday afternoon in the
galleries of Morrill hall with a
program that is especially ar
ranged for the members. Monday,
however, will begin a period of
four weeks during which the
public will be privileged to view
the exhibit, the most important
art showing of the year in Lincoln.
Two galleries of paintings have
been chosen by the association that
represent the works of the lead
ing and prize-winning artists of
the country as well as many diff
erent schools of thought, kinds of
views, and types of paintings.
Among the canvases that th
asociation has secured by consid
erable effort to please its patrons
are "My Mother and Father" by
John Stuart Curry, which was re
produced in color in the first
issue of "Life;" "Miners Resting,"
by Paul Sample, an artist who
was greatly appreciated at last
year's exhibit: and works of both
Thomas Benton and Grand Wood.
Other artists that will be repre
sented in this collection will be
Lauren Ford, by her "Little Boy
Blue:" Maurice Pendergast, a
( Continued on Page 4.)
II. RIDER TO PLAY
ON tRONE-0-PIIONE
FOR I) ELI AN UNION
t Henry P.icier. who earns his bread
and butter putting together pieces
of prehistoric animals in the base
ment of Morrill Hall, has con
structed a unique musical instru
ment which he has dubbed a
"bone-o-phone." This instrument,
constructed out of odds and ends
of bones left over from dinosaurs
and armarillas, will accompany Mr.
Rider on a jaunt up to Room S03,
Temple building Friday night, Feb.
26. at 9 o'clock, where the pair will
entertain members of the Delian
Union Literary society with a nov
el recital.
An aded feature will be an il
lustrated lecture on Carlsbad cav
ern, to be given by Assistant Pro
fessor Edwin A. Grone, of the de
partment of electrical engineering.
All unaffiliated students are
cordiallv invited to attend.
Y. M. C. A. DISCUSSION
GROUP TOJIEET AT NOON
Topic, 'Qualifications for
Discipleship,' Stresses
Life of Christ.
! All university men interested in
a discussion of important features
I in the life of Jesus and the rela
tion of these characteristics to
problems of modern life will meet
today at a luncheon to be held in
room 6 of Grant Memorial hall.
Secretary C. D. Hayes of the
campus Y. M. C. A., who is ia
charge of the entire series of pre
Easttr discussion meetings, states
that the subject of the meetiiig
this noon will be "Qualificationa
for Discipleship." with emphasis
placed on a study of the absolute
commitment required of those who
follow Jesus. Elmer Horstman,
junior in arts and sciences college,
has been apointed chairman of the
committee in charge of the e
maining meeting.
ft?
5 .
5
? -"
t-