The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 23, 1924, Image 1

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    The Daily Nebraskan
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The Daily Nebraskan
PI BETA PHI
LEADS FIELD
Sorority Competition Keen in
Contest for Nebraskan
Subscriptions.
MUST CHECK IN SALES
AT END OF EACH DAY
Pi Beta Phi sorority led at the end
of the first day in the subscription
' contest for The Daily Nebraskan. Al
though ' several sororities were not
rpnresented until after noon, com
petition was keen all day Monday.
The Delta Gamma's were In second
, ' place, while other sororities were not"
far behind.
No certain results for the first day
can be published since no sorority
. had checked in completely Monday
evening, and several had not check
ed in at all. Sororities are asked to
turn in all their subscriptions each
' day, between 4 and 6 o'clock at the
; business office of The Dailly Ne--
braskan, University Hall 10B. Re
ceipt books will be returned in ample
time for the next day's campaign.
Additional books were distributed-'
Monday evening. A supply of tag
for identifying subscribers will .be
available at the business office short
ly after noon Tuesday.
After Wednesday morning The
Daily Nebraskan will not be distri
buted free of charge from the Uni
versity Post Office in University
Hall. The presentation of receipts
showing payment will be the only
identification that will entitle a sub
' sciber to a copy of the paper.
Although some of the sororities se
cured promises from fraternities that
the fraternity Would credit its sub
scriptions to that sorority, Clarence
Eickhoff, business manager, announ
ces that fraternity or sorority sub
scriptions toe be delivered to the
houses each morning will not count
' in the contest.
The contest will end Thursday af
ternoon at 4 o'clock. After the sor
orities have checked in their books
and money, the standings will be
figured. Immediate announcement
will be made in regard to the winJ
ning sorority, which will receive
twenty copies of The Daily Nebras
kan delivered to the sorority house
every morning. The sorority which
secures the most points will, in ad
dition, have its group picture pub
lished in the paper soon after the
close of the contest
The ensuing publicity, the man
agement feels, would in itself be suf
ficient award to the winning soro
rity, since the circulation will total
more than 3,000 this year, being dis
tributed to all the high schools of
Nebraska, to the leading colleges of
the country, as well as to many of
the alumni of the University.
For each year's subscription, 10
points will be awarded the sorority
securing it, whether it be a local or
mail subscription; and for each one
of one semester duration 3 points
will be awarded. Local and students
subscriptions will cost (2 a year and
$1.25 a semester. Mail subscriptions
will be $3 a year.
Each ssrority will be in charge of
one of the three tables, located in
University Hall, Social Science
Building, and Library, for half a
day once during the campaign. Miss
Barbara Wiggenhorn, chairman olj
the committee in charge of the con
test, is also arranging for a cam
paign to be launched from the booth
located between Grant Memorial
Hall and Univsrsity Hall.
SINGERS TO TRY
FOR GLEE CLUB
Tryouts to be Held Wednesday
Evening in the Art
Gallery.
Try-outs for the men's University
Glee Club will be held Wednesday,
September 24, at 7 o'clock in the
Art Gallery, Library Building. These
try-outs are open to all men of the
four classes who are regularly enrol
led in the University. The club will
be directed by Parvin Witte who has
been with the club for the past three
years.
Under Mr. Witte's direction, the
club will start work at once on the
program -which will be used in the
Missouri Valley Glee Club Contest
which is being held in Kansas City,
February 14th. The winner of this
contest will be sent to the Interna
tional Glee Club Contest which is
held in New York City.
The Club will make its usual an
nual spring tour during spring vacs
tion, visiting some of . the larger
towns of this state and the neighbor
ing ones. It is the wish of the club
to increase its present membership
to forty Tuicek. Freshmen are espe
cially urged to try out
Fraternity Pledges'
Names Published Soon
A complete list of the new stu
dents who have been pledged to any
of the social fraternities will be pub
lished at the end of this week. Pro
fessor R. D. Scott, professor of mo
dern onglioh drama and in charge of
instruction in freshman english, is
handling the pledge lists.
Pledges were required to turn in
a statement of high school fraterni
ties or social clubs to which they be
longed. If this has not been done,
such a statement should be submitted
immediately, according to Professor
Scott.
DORMITORY RULES
CHANGED BY DEAN
Rooms May Now be Leased for
Only One Semester; the
Houses Not Full.
Dormitory roms may be leased for
only one semester, according to an
announcemen t made Monday by
Dean Amanda Heppner. A number
of choice rooms are still available
and may be had for prices varying
from $41 to $58 for one semester,
or four and one-half months. Women
who are intrested should inquire at
Ellen Smith Hall.
Until this year women living in
dormitories were required to lease
their rooms for the entire year. As
vacancies still remain it has been de
cided to make the ruling less binding.
The dormitories are open to upper
classwomen, graduate women stu
dents and women employees as well
as freshmen.
A large percent of the rooming
houses near the campus also have
vacant rooms. This fact is attributed
to the large number of women who
are working for board and room in
private homes, to the movement of
students to the residence section
where they make their homes with
friends and relatives, and to the
small increase of women students in
the new registration.
New Method Adopted by Athletic
Committee
After selling student athletic tick
ets for two years by the salesman
method, the athletic department has
decided that the students are suffi
ciently educated to fully appreciate
the real value of the single tax
method. Consequently no students
will be asked to tul tickets on the
campus nor will any student be ap
proached other than through posters
and publicity.
The student athletic ticket, a
blanket ticket to cover every athletic
event on the Cornhusker schedule, is
universally used in colleges. It gives
the student the advantage of the
monev saved by eliminating the cost
of separate campaigns for each sport
And, it balances the profitable ana
unprofitable sport to enable regular
expenditures in each department.
According to the present plans,
tickets will be placed on sale and
students will present their registra
tion fee receipt to prove that they are
regularly enrolled students in the
University. Seats will be reserved
for the four Nebraska football games
1924 Cornhuskers to be
Disposed of This Week
The sale of 1924 Cornhuskers waj
verv ffood. according to the manage
ment of last year's annual. There
qre a few books on wh'ch first pay
ments were made and which have
not been claimed. Any student who
failed to make his later payments
can get his Cornhusker by paying
the remainder of the price at the
student activities office in the Arm-
iry Tuesday oi Wednesday after
noon.
Open House Held by
Sororities Sunday
Open house was held Sunday, Sep
tember 21 from 2 to 6 o'clock by the
following sororities: Alpha Chi
Omega, Alpha Omicron Pi, Alpha Phi,
Chi Omega, Delta Delta Delta, Delta
Gamma, Delta, Zeta, Kappa Alpha
Theta, Phi Mu, 'iheta Phi Alpha.
Many fraternities took orchestras
with them and all of them sang their
fraternity songs. Refreshments were
served by all of the sororities.
NEBRASKAN POSITIONS.
Advertising solicitors and circu
lation assistants are needed on
The Daily Nebraskan. Applica
tions for these positions will be
received at University Hall 10B
from 2 to 5 o'clock each day this
week. Students with previous ex
perience on college, high school,
or city newspapers are especially
urged to apply.
THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA,
Annual Staff to
Be Picked Soon
Applications will be received
for editorial and business staff
positions on the 1925 Cornhusker
Wednesday noon. Students de
siring work are requested to call
at the office In University Hall
10 and fill out application blanks
stating qualifications. Students
who are interested are urged by
Wendell Berge, editor, to apply.
All of the positions open do not
require previous Journalistic ex
perience. The positions to be filled on the
editorial staff are: Five associate
editors, three assistant managing
editors, office manager, art editor,
photography editor, and editors
and staff members for forty-five
different sections of the book.
AIMNIYERSITY
PARTY PLANNED
First of Six Dances to be Held
Saturday Night in the
Armory.
A Freshman Party, at the Armory
Saturday evening, planned by the
All-University Party Committee in
order that freshmen may get ac
quainted with each other and with
upperclassmen, is to be the first of
a series of six All-University Par
ties. Refreshments and games in addi
tion, to the dance are being planned
by the committee which met Monday
afternoon. The admission to the
party will be 35c.
Members of the general committee
are chairmen of the various sub-committees
that will make final arrange
ments for the party. The member
ship of these committees will be an
nounced in a few days.
Latimer Hubka is general chair
man and Margaret Long is secretary
of the general committee.
for Ticket Campaign
and the game between Wesleyan and
Simpson. Basketball will probably
be played in the Coliseum, but no
plans have been made for the reser
vation of seats there. Other sports
will not require reservations.
In order that students will be al
lowed to sit with friends who might
come to the football games, the ath
letic department has made a provi
sion that a student may bring in his
reserved ticket before a game and
trade it for a ticket in some other
part of the Stadium and purchase, as
many ntore as he desires. This will
eliminate any objection to the re
served seats.
No mark for the sales to reach is
being set Three thousand seats,
however, have been reserved as the
student section and it is expected that
at least that many students will want
the tickets. In order that there will
be no preference other than arriving
at the booth early, no tickets will
be reserved by earlier request nor
will any tickets be sold from any oth
er place than the central booth on the
campus.
VESPER CHOIR
TRYOUTS SOON
Fifteen New Members to be
Selected Thursday After
noon From 2 to 5. t
Tryouts foi the vesper choir will
be held Thursday afternoon from 2
to 5 o'clock in Ellen Smith Hall. Fif
teen new members will be chosen.
Range of voice and ability to read
music will be tested in the tryout
Personality and dependability nill
also be considered in election.
Old members are requested to re
port at the vesper service at 5
o'clock. Practice will be held each
Thursday at 6 o'clock.
The Vesper choir provides music
for the vesper service and for special
exents in the Y W. C. A. Philan
thropic work is also undertaken and
an effort is made to visit some insti
tution or mission once every month.
Treat Stadium Track
With Coat of Cinders
Work has been started on the run
ning track at the Stadium to put it
in shape for fall training. Work
men are engaged in spreading a coat
of cinders an inch thick on the track.
The rough cinders used lest year have
been taken off and finer cinders are
being used this year.
PLANS COMPLETE
FOR INITIATION
Freshmen Expected to Over
flow the Armory in Meet
ing this Morning.
OFFICIALS AND LEADERS
OF UNIVERSITY TO SPEAK
Everything is in readiness for the
annual Freshman Initiation, which
will be held at the Armory this morn
ing at 10 o'clock. All freshmen have
been excused from their 10 and 11
o'clock classes to attend the meeting,
and the first-year students are ex
pected to go direct from their 9
o'clock classes to the Armory.
The main floor and the galleries
of the Armory will be thrown open
to the freshmen, who arg expected
to pack Memorial HaU to the doors.
The meeting will be opened by selec
tions by the University Band. Fol
lowing the band numbers will be
cheering lead by "Duke" Gleason and
his corps of cheerleaders. The fresh
men will learn and practice the Corn
husker yells,' which will be printed
on handbills distributed at the en
trances. Following the yell practice by the
new students, Wendell Berge, presi
dent of the Innocents, will make a
preliminary speech and introduce
Chancellor Avery, who will address
the freshmen, welcoming them to the
University.
Following the talk by Chancellor
Avery, Prof. R. D. Scott will give a
short talk on scholarship. Dean of,
Women Amanda Heppner will Bpeak
and she will be followed by Kathryn
Warner, President of Black Masque
chapter of Mortarboard. Dean of
Men Carl Engberg will explain the
various espects of university life.
Dean Engberg's talk will be followed
by a speech on "Cornhusker Spirit"
by director of athletics and head
football coach Fred T. Dawson.
The "Nebraska Oath" will then be
given to the freshmen by Wendell
Berge. Following the oath the Uni
versity Quartet will sing the chant
The entire gathering will then sing
the "Cornhusker."
Following the singing of the Corn
husker the Class of '28 will adjourn
to the campus south of the Armory,
where still and motion pictures will
be taken of them. These pictures will
be shown in the leading theatres
throughout the state during the fall
and winter months.
UNIVERSITY OFFERS
COURSES IN OMAHA
Extension Division to Cooper
ate With Advertising
Selling League.
The University Extension Division,
with the- cooperation of the Adver
tising Selling League of Omaha, will
offer five night classes upon the fun
damental principles of business to
business people of Omaha and 'Vici
nity for a period of twenty weeks
during the coming winter months.
The College of Business Adminis
tration of the University will be in
complete charge of the instruction.
Salesmanship, Business Law, Business
Economics, Marketing and higher Ac
counting will be the subjects in which
instruction will be given. All classes
will be held from 7:30 to 9 o'clock
at Central High School, 20th and
Dodge "streets. The classes will open
during the week of October 13, the
meetings being held on the evenings
designated for each subject Ten
meetings of each class will be held
before Christmas and ten after Jan
uary, 1925.
Classes in Salesmanship will meet
every Friday, beginning October 17,
under Professor A. G. Hinman.
Classes in Business Law will be
taught by Prof. T. T. Bullock on Mon
days, beginning October 13. Classes
in Higher Accounting will be under
the instruction of Pro D. T. Cole.
Dean J. i E. LeRossignol of the
College of Business Administration
will teach Business Economiss.
Classes will begin October 15 and
will meet on Wednesdays.
Marketing, a course which will deal
with the marketing functions, retail
ing, standardisation, and price main
tenance, will be taught by Prof. E.
Fullbrook, formerly of the University
of Iowa. Professor Fullbrook is as
sociate professor of economics and
commerce in the College of Business
Administration.
People desiring to enter any of
the courses are requested to write to
F. O. Mahn, general secretary, Advertising-Selling
League of Omaha,
1113 City National Bank Building,
Omaha, Nebraska. Tuition for 3ach
of the classes for the entire twenty
weeks is ten dollars. One dollar regis
tration fee is charged.
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1924
Cadet Ushers for
Games Still Needed
More than 300 cadets are need
ed to usher at the Stadium for the
football season beginning with the
Illinois game, October 4. About
sixty men have been accepted so
far. Application blanks may be
secured in the Military office on
the second floor of Nebraska Hall
and must be turned in before Sat
urday. Ushers will be able to see the
games free and will be given free
tickets for all other athltic events
during the year. Advanced course
men will be given charge of the
various sections. Sophomores are
given preference but it will be
necessary to use a number of
freshmen to fill in.
MANY GREEN CAPS
SEEN ON CAMPUS
More Than 600 Already Sold
by Farquhar's Supply
Running Low.
The (tock of green cap al
Farquhar'a is completely ex
hauied. A new shipment is ex
pected by Thursday or Friday.
More green caps are putting in
their appearance on the campus every
day. According to the last figures
given out at Farquhar's yesterday
afternoon, more than 600 have been
sold, and the supply is running low.
More have been ordered, and fresh
men without caps will be able to get
theirs by the end of the week.
The dead-line for purchasing the
head dress has been set at October
1, and it is desired that they be worn
at the Freshman initiation this morn
ing. Fraternities are urging their
pledges to wear green caps immed
iately, and many are already enforc
ing the rule.
Because of the more desirable
shape of the caps this year, less viola
tions of the rule are expected to ap
pear, and as has been the custom, the
Iron Sphinx will be in charge of en
forcement First Blue Print to
Come OutOctober 1
Several numbers of the Nebraska
Engineering Blue Print, official pub
lication of the Nebraska Engineering
Society, will be published during the
present school year .
The first issue, to appear October
1, will be a special Sigma Tau num
ber. A copy will be presented to
each member attending the 20th An
nual Convention of Sigma Tau, hon
orary engineering fraternity founded
at Nebraska, to be held here Octo
ber 2, 3, and 4.
An alumni page on which will ap
pear articles about the most suc
cessful graduates of the college wT
be a feature in each number. Arti
cles of semi-technical nature will
m,,ke up the body of the publication.
The subscription price will be one
dollar for the school year.
Several Sorority Pledge Lists
Left Out of Sunday's Nebraskan
Because of an error in the compos
ing roont The Daily Nebraskan omit
ted names of the pledges to the sor
orities listed below. Pledging took
place Saturday evening at the chap
ter houses. Sorority colors which
are being worn by the pledges will
be replaced within a few weeks by
pledge pins.
Gamma Phi Beta.
Virginia Atkins, Bridgeport
Betty Powell, Winterset, Iowa.
Margaret Walker, Gibbon.
Mary McMasters, Sioux City,
Iowa.
Iola Solso, Laurel.
Margaret Miller, Lakeview, Iowa.
Priscilla Boyd, Lincoln.
Helen Slade, Lincoln.
Agnes Sorensen, Hartington.
Dorothy Petersen, Chicago, Hli
noisf Lillian Carlsen, Central City.
Marjorie Jean Holtman, Norfolk.
Helen Van Gilder, Hastings.
j .Florence viiazicr, uumpnin.
Jeanette Sever, Hiawatna, Kansas.
Jean Hall, Omaha.
Grace Hall, Omaha.
Katherine Pilger, Stanton. .
Sharlene Cooper, Aurora. '
Alpha Omicron Pi.
Frances King, Belgrade.
Eloise Keeger, Lincoln.
Edith Simanek, Prague.
Margaret Moore, Tecumseh.
Louise, Hilsabeck, Casper, Wyom
ing. .
Alice Weese, Omaha.
Voline Nichols, Louisville.
Loreen Sparks, Maryville, Kans.
DeanTerguson Listing
Engineering Graduates
Dean Fwcuson of the College of
Engineering s compiling data for
a directory of all the graduates of
the college since its founding. The
list, which will include more than
1,400 names, and as much informa
tion about each graduate as is pos
sible to list, will be published in the
second issue of the Nebraska Engin
eering Blueprint, official organ of
Nebraska Engineering Society, which
will appear November 10.
DEAN HEPPNER
TO GIVE TEA
All Women Connected With
University Invited to An
nual Affair.
FRESHMAN WOMEN TO
BE GUESTS OF HONOR
Dean Amanda Heppner will give
her annual tea for all women con
nected with the University Thursday
afternoon, September 25, from 4 to
6 o'clock in Ellen Smith Hall. Fresh
man women will be guests of honor.
In the receiving line with Dean
Heppner will be Mrs. Samuel Avery,
Miss Erma Eppleby, secretary of the
University Y. W. C. A., Mrs. J. F.
Thompson, hostess of Ellen Smith
Hall, and Miss Helen Cook, assistant
in the office of dean of women. Miss
Barbara Wiggenhorn, president of
the Womens' Self-Governing Associ
ation, will introduce the guests to
Dean Heppner during the first hour
and Miss Kathryn Warner will be at
the door the second hour.
An informal program will be giv
en. Following the custom of past
years, members of the W. S. G. A.
Board, the W. A. A. Board and the
Senior Advisory Board will assist in
arranging decorations for the event
and will entertain the guests in the
drawing room and court The cabinet
of the Y. W. C. A. will be in charge
of the dining room. Mrs. Sam
Waugh, sr., and Mrs. Clara Bryan,
who have acted as sorority and dor
mitory matrons longer than any oth
er house mothers, will preside over
the serving.
All women students including gra
duate students, faculty women and
sorority and dormitory chaperones
are invited by Dean Heppner to meet
the first-year women. The opening
tea is one of the largest .social af
fairs given for women throughout
the year.
R. S. Mueller, '98, Gives
Test Clips to Engineers
R S. Muellerd, '98, oC the Muel
ler Electrict Company of Cleveland,
Ol io, recently presented moro than
eigh:y universal te-.r clips to the
Elect ucal Engineering Laboratory
lor use in makin-.r quick innc. tion
in. ikctric circuits.
A number if the clips are es
pecially adapted for storage battery
work, being c.-M'oped after exten
sive researcii in the field of electro
plating. They are of brass or cop
per, lead plated so that the acid of
the latter.es will not have a corro
sive effect. Others :f the clips are
six inches, in length, and are capable
of carrying 200 amycres.
Hazel Aldrich, Tobias.
Louise, Wohlenberg, Lincoln.
Opal Weisner, Red Cloud.
Alice Preszler, Sioux City, Iowa.
Helen Betz, Sioux City, Iowa.
Dorothy Lessenich, -Sioux City.
Dorothy Mercer, Lincoln.
Frances Aiken, Cambridge.
Gladys Matthews, Villisca, Iowa.
Alsamine King.
Winrifred Steele, Lincoln.
Esther Lakeman, Lincoln. "
Kappa Kappa Gamma
Louise Dempster, Beatrice.
Edith Sadler, Omaha.
Lillian West Nebraska City.
Louise Gunther, Albion.
Drucilla Dillon, Humboldt
Lillian McGuire, Nebraska City.
Dorothy Sherman, Omaha.
Charlotte Smitn, Omaha.
Virginia Trumbull, Omaha.
Alice Connett Cheyenne, Wyo.
Katherine King, Sidney.
Helen Stebben, Albion.
Eva Osborne, Genoa.
Ellen Fritzlen, Lincoln
Katherine Lawlor, Lincoln.
Francis Gustin, Lincoln.
Janet Matthews, Lincoln.
Janice Walt Lincoln.
Charlotte Miller, Lincoln.
Adeline Jack Lincoln.
Sigma Kappa
Margaret Blish, Pine Ridge, S. D.
Florence Phillips, Villasco, Iowa.
Dorothy Howe, Fremont
Helen Kreps, Lincoln.
Katherine King, Lincoln.
(Continued on Page Four.)
STADIUM SEATS
ALL RESERVED
Nebaska Athletic Tickets Go
On Sale Next Monday
for $7.50.
STUDENTS' SECTION TO
BE LOCATED IN CENTER
A section comprising three thous
and seats in the heart of the Memor
ial Stadium, extending from 20-yard
line to 20-yard line and from the
first to the twenty-second row, has
been reserved as the student section
for the 1924 football season, accord
ing to John K. Selleck, business agent
for the athletic department. Contrary
to the plan of a year ago, all students
will reserve scats for the season.
This, Mr. Selleck stated, will elimin
ate the necessity of students going
early to the games in order to get the
choice seats.
All tickets will go on sale Monday
morning September 29, at 7:15. They
will be sold for $7.60. Prior to that
time, no tickets will be reserved and
preference will be given in order
of demand at the ticket windows on
that morning. , Monroe D. Gleason
general chairman of the sales, stated
that students will not be solicited by
salesmen in any manner but that it
is purely a question of the student
appreciating the real value that he
is receiving "a privilege that no one
but a regularly enrolled student in
the University is given."
According to the present plans, the
chairman stated, a student will have
to prove that he is a student in the
University by presenting his registra
tion fee receipt. He will then be al
lowed to buy a ticket This is plan
ned to eliminate all outsiders from
the student section, placing any lack
of sportsmanship on the student body
or on the other spectators.
Organizations that want to sit in
a body at the games are urged to
collect the money before the tickets
ge on sale and appoint a member to
be in line Monday morning. This is
the only satisfactory method that the
committee has been able to find to
give everyone an equal chance at the
choicer seats.
' Mr. Selleck stated that students
have been given every consideration
in the choice of seats in the stadium.
He also added that the department
has made a provision to enable stu
dents to turn in their tickets for any
one game and receive another in
some other part of the stadium so
that they may sit with their friends
or relatives. This was planned to
eliminate any objection to the reser
vation of seats.
Monroe D. Gleason, general chair
man, and Emmett V. Maun, chairman
of the publicity feel confident that
the students will take at least three
thousand of the seats. Freshmen,
who have not had the opportunity to
realize the real benefits of the stu
dent athletic ticket are considered
the only obstacles to the immediate
success of the sales mark. To an
nounce the sale of the tickets and to
better inform all men and women of
the real benefits of the athletic ticket,
a short campaign of publicity will be
conducted before the sale opens.
Posters, bills,, and cards plus the
newspapers will be used to encourage
rapid sales.
N BOOK SUPPLY
GROWS SMALLER
Freshmen Are Urged to Pre
sent Cards for Copies
Immediately.
Freshmen who have not received
copies of the 1921-25 "N" book must
do so immediately. Philip Lewis,
editor of the N book, states that as
the books have been put on sale to
upperclassmen, the supply has dimin
ished to less than 400. The books are
free to new students who present
their cards, given them at registra
tion at the Y. M. C. A. in the Temple
building, or at the Y. W. C. A. in
Ellen Smith Hall.
The N book include Information
of all kinds fo rstudents. Among
the interesting features are a calen
dar of important events and explan
ations of the point system for wo
men's activities and the University
traditions. Lists of fraternities and
sororities, an athletic section and a
list of campus organizations are in
cluded. The book is bound in leather and
is gold trimmed. It is larger than
those of previous years. The price
to upperclassmen is fifty cents.
Stadenta ia the Scfcool of Joer
aaliim aad any otter who aare
bad experience in newspaper work
who woujj! lik to report for The
Daily Nebraskan aro requested ta
call at the editorial offices ia Uni
versity Hall 10 ary aftaraooa this
weak. .
Cm