The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 25, 1925, Image 1

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    The
.Daily
N
EBRA
VOL. XXIV NO. 112.
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1925.
PRICE 5 CENTS
SKAN
MELODRAMA IS
TO BE STAGED
"The Devil's Disciple," by Ber
nard Shaw, to Be Player'
Production.
PLAY WILL BE GIVEN
AT END OF THIS WEEK
"The Devil's Disciple," a melo
drama in three acts by Bernard
Shaw, the last play of the season to
be given by the"tJniversity Players,
will be presented Thursday, Friday,
Saturday evenings and Saturday af
ternoon. Leading parts are carried
by Dolores Bosse and Herbert Yenne.
Mr. Yenne will play the part of
Richard Dudgeon, who is the "Dev
il's Disciple." This is Mr. Yenne's
first important role since his appear
ance in "Madam X." He has played
two seasons in professional stock
and with the Forest, Mountain and
Desert Players in California. His
work in California was highly prais
ed by the Los Angeles Times and fit-
lowing the season he was offered a
contract by the University of Cali
fornia but he refused to leave Ne
braska.
Mi Bom to Appear
Miss Bosse is carrying an exceed
ingly heavy role. She will play the
part of Judith Anderson. She is a
senior in the dramatics department
and has played in a number of the
University Players productions.
The play deals with a man, Rich
ard Dudgeon, who had been brought
up in a Puritan community. He re-
bells at the restrictions placed upon
him and runs away from home. At
the death of his father he is left
sole heir to the property and returns
home to take his place in the com
munity. '
Shortly after he arrives, he is mis
taken for a minister and is taken
away to be hung. Richard Dudgeon
then shows his heroic qualities by
accepting the masquerade. With a
hangman's rope about his neck, the
Devil's Disciple jests with death
while the fatal minutes speed by.
Has Historical Basis
The play would be of unusual in
terest to history students because the
costumes and stage-settings are true
to the period, of the play. The plot
and incidents of the play are all bas
ed on historical facts according to
the author, Bernard Shaw.
The scenery for the play is being
done by students in the stage design
class under the direction of Dwight
Kirsh.
The cast of the play in order of
their appearance is as follows:
Mrs. Dudgeon Marion Sargent.
Essie Pauline GellatUy.
Christy Ray Ramsey.
Reverend Anderson Dolores
Uncle Titus Dudgeon Henry Ley.
Uncle William Dudgeon Ed
ward Taylor.
Mrs. William Dudgeon Flor
ence Flodeen.
Richard Dudgeon Herbert Yenne
Lawyer Hawkins Dwight Merri
am. Major Swindon Harold Sumption
Sergeant Clyde Cone.
Chaplain Henry Ley.
Hangman Harold Stribbling
Y. W. C. A. STAFF
IS GIVEN DlllllER
Retiring Members Take Part in
Informal Discussion of
"Worship."
The last dinner of the Y. W. C. A.
retiring staff was held .in Ellen Smith
Hall Tuesday evening after vespers.
Doris Trott led an informal discus
sion on "Worship." The finance
committee and the committee on
Posters had charge of the dinner.
Gladys Lux is chairman of the
Poster committee, and the rest of her
committee includes Myreta Hill, Lou
ise Austin, Mary McCarty, and Flor
ence Frahm. The finance committee
headed by Elsie Gramlich. Those
oa her committee are Ershall Free
man, Kathryn Krieg, Elsa Kerkow,
Lois Jackman, Lillian Johnson, and
Virginia Taylor.
Wants Applications
For Nebraskan Staff
Applications for appointment to
the following positions on the edi
torial staff of The Daily Nebras
kan for the second half of the se
mester will be received until noon,
Wednesday, March 25: editor,
managing editor, news editor, as
sistant news editor.
Application blanks may be got
at the office of the chairman aid
of Secretary J. K. Selleck.
M. M. FOGG,
Chairman, Student Publication
Board.
LAST ALL-UNIVERSITY PARTY
Will Coma Nest Saturday la Arm
ory Kaady Kids to Play
The last All-University party of
the year will be held Saturday eve
ning in the Armory at 8:15, accord
ing to plans made at a meeting of
the committee Tuesday in Ellen
Smith Hall.
Decorations in harmony with the
spring season will be used, and the
committee has arranged for special
entertainment during the intermis
sion. Music will be furnished by the
Kandy Kids, eight-piece orchestra.
Refreshments consisting of punch and
wafers will be served. Admission is
thirty-five cents.
BLOCK AND BR1DLB
CHOOSES KENDALL
Makes Him President; Tolman
Will Manage Baby Inter
national Stock Show.
Russell Kendall, Urbana, HI., was
elected president of the Block and
Bridle Club at a meeting held in the
new club rooms of the organization,
in the judging pavillion, Monday eve
ning. Daniel Seibold, Papillion,
was elected vice-president; Wendell
Woodward, Overton, secretary; Ed
Crowley, Cambrdge, treasurer; and
Melvin Lewis, Lincoln, sergeant-at-arms.
The Block and Bridle Club is
made up of men majoring in the ani
mal husbandry department. This or
ganization will sponsor a judging
contest for freshmen in the College
of Agriculture, to be held in the
near future.
Walter Tolman, Lincoln, was elect
ed manager of the Baby Internation
al Livestock show. This show is a
minature of the International Live
stock Exposition and is an annual
event. Next year's Baby Interna
tional will probably be held sometime
near the end of October.
BASEBALL MEN GO
THROUGH PRACTICE
Wet Grounds Prevent Work on
Diamond; Batting and Pitch
in Are Stressed.
Coach W. G. Kline yesterday put
his baseball squad through the paces
at Rock Island Park. The varsity
ball-chasers will be at that location
for the rest of the practice season.
Wet erounds slowed up the work
out on the regular diamond, being
compelled to take the outfield.
The nractice was confined to hit
ting and fielding, with short work
outs for the pitchers. The tempor
arv field was unsuited for anything
else. Coach Kline used four or five
Ditchers to practice with the batters
who knocked the pill all around the
field.
Gallmever. Edwards, Lang, and
Stribline were the hurlers who were
given a chance to limber up on the
mound.
Almost thirty men are out, and
they were all given a chance at hit
ting and fielding. "Kewpie" Lang
was catching for all the pitchers. He
was the only Varsity catcher who
showed up yesterday.
Real work should get under way
non. With their ioints oiled up and
their heels lightened, the squad will
probably get down to tne aauy gnnu
within a week.
Frofthman nractice will start in two
or three weeks. A thinning out of
ika nii1r miarf will come some
time before that, according to Coach
Kline, and the freshmen will not be
called until after that
Student Business Man Tells How
w f y?
He Remembers
Columbia University Laundry
Manager Has Marvelous
1 Memory for Persons.
"If you want to remember a per
son or thing, simply associate some
thing with the individual or the name.
Make that name stand out from
other and think of it in connection
with some special thing or object and
ni r,itH it hit to remember
persons and names," said David B.
Sklaire, frr four years student man
ager of the laundry at Columbia Uni-
rersity. Sklaire, a student in me
School of Commerce, is the possessor
.iMn mpinnrr that defies
VI asta awwuM-f'-a
the competition of a Chinese laundry
ticket He is also better
than any other person on the campus,
simply because of his uncanny facil
ity of remembering the names and
Woild Forum to Hold
No Discussion Today
The weekly World Forum lun
cheon at the Grand Hotel will not
be held today, according to an an
nouncement by Arthur Jorgenson,
Y. M. C. A. secretary. It was im
possible this week to obtain a
speaker.
NEBRASKA SCENERY
WILL BE DESCRIBED
Condra to Lecture on South
eastern Part of State in
Representative Hall.
Scenery and topography of south
eastern Nebraska will be described in
representative hall of the State capi
tol at 7:30 o'clock this evening by Dr.
G. E. Condra, director of the conser
vation and survey division of the
University of Nebraska. Representa
tives and senators from that section
of the state will comment upon the
slides and reels which illustrate the
lecture. Arbor Lodge and the Big
Blue parks will be depicted in detail.
Dr. Condra lectures in representa
tive hall every Wednesday evening,
taking up a particular section of the
state in each talk. The public is in
vited to attend the lectures and take
the seats in the balcony. The lower
floor is reserved for representatives
and senators.
TEA!! COMPLETES
SHOOTING SEASON
Makes Record of Fifteen Vic
tories, Thirteen Defeats;
Two Reports Not in.
The Nebraska rifle team completed
its intercollegiate rifle shooting sea
son with fifteen victories and thir
teen defeats. The results of the
matches against St John's College
and Agricultural College- -of Utah
held last week have not yet been de
termined.
In comparing this season with that
of last year, in which only four
matches were lost out of fifty con
tests, it must be taken into consider
ation, that there has been a change in
the method of scoring. Last year he
scores were determined by progres
sive shooting. This year the shoot
ing was recorded only on registered
targets.
The highest score of the season
was recorded last week when the rifle
squad of New York University, using
the averages of the ten highest men
shooting in the prone, sitting, kneel
ing and standing positions, sent in
total of 3868.
The highest individual score of the
season was turned in by E. Nathen
son, a member of the New York Uni
versity rifle team, who shot the nearly-perfect
score of 396. He regis
tered perfect scores in the prone and
kneeling positions, 99 in the sitting
position, and 97 in the standing po
sition. Another exceptional score
was hung up when the ten highest
men on the North Dakota Agricultur
al College averaged 92.1 in the stand
ing position.
Embrvo reporters on the Daily
Texan, of the University of Texas,
have the much needed reportorial in
stinct the Texan says. Every mem
ber of the beginning class was sent
to cover Governor Ferguson's inang-
uration, and when the doors of the
capital were closed, every member
was inside and on the job.
A daily newspaper will be publish-
a i, ttin ctnrienta in the course in
journalism of the University of Wis
consin during the three-day Univer
sity Exposition April 16 to 18.
Names ana races
-
faces with which he comes into con
tact in his business relations.
t follinir about his ability to asso
ciate faces and names, Sklaire went
mi to sav. "Everyone has a person
ality and characteristic that peculiar
ly different from any other person s
"For example, when I heard Pro-
fessor Jone's name, I at once recalled
who he was and I made up my mind
know him by sight When be eame
into the store the second time, I
didn't f ail to recognize him.
In telling of the value of this abil
itv. he said. "I have often wondered
wVi.t the business men thinks of the
student what impression the theor
etical student leaves on the practical
business man. As a student and at
the same time a business man I ve
bad an interesting study in psychol-
mrv. To sit on top of the fence and
note these incidents is certainly en
tertaining as wen as instructive.
PICK CHAIRMEN
FOR ENGINEERS
American Society of Civil En
gineers Wilt Help in An
nual Celebration.
DALTON WILL DIRECT
ASSOCIATION'S WORK
Chairmen have been appointed by
Willard J. Turnbull, civil engineer
ing, 5, for the American Society of
Civil Engineers' contribution to the
annual Engineers' Week celebration,
May 4-9.
C. R. Dalton has been selected as
general chairman of the civil engi
neers' in preparation for Engineers'
Week. Professor Clark E. Mickey
will supervise the work of the com
mittee which determines the civil en
gineering student who is to receive
the scholarship offered by Profes
sor Mickey.
The remaining appointment to be
made is that of the chairman of the
committee on prises for the best
models. Following are the chairmen
selected:
Civil engineers' float Leslie R.
Peter.
Civil engineering and applied me
chanics drawings C. E. Closson.
Window displays Douglas Lewis.
Signs and posters 0. H. Marl
ing.
Applied mechanics laboratory A.
W. Johnson.
Cement laboratory Alfred But
ler.
Surveying instruments display
George F. Brannigan.
Freshman models no A. Trively.
Scholarship Gus Quattrochi,
chairman; William Carver, Donald
Thompson.
Concessions Edward Richardson.
SPRING CALLS;
SQUAD SHRINKS
Only Seventeen Gridsters Re
port for Practice; Bears
Stresses Passing.
BUT SIX MEN ON
DEFENSIVE TEAM
The call of spring, wafted on the
balmy breezes from the south, has
evidently affected some score of
spring football candidates who stop
ped reporting for practice with the
advent of 'warmer weather. At the
practice session yesterday there were
only seventeen men out, hardly
enough to form one full team on the
offensive and a skeleton team to op
pose it Coach Bearg is wondering
where the shady lane is in which his
spring football candidates are prom
enading during the scrimmage period
when they should be learning foot
ball. The practice yesterday consisted of
an hour or so of passing, followed by
the customary scrimmage period of
about an hour. Stevens, "Jug7
Brown, and Presnell did most of the
passing in this preliminary period.
The backfield in the scrimmage
was made up of Presnell, and "Jug"
Brown at half, Peaker at full, and
Stevens, quarter. In the line were
Gross at center, Reller and Witte at
guards, Raiscj and Casey at tackles,
and Gillen and Joe Weir at ends.
There were only six men o.i the
defensive line. Stiner and Kanui-ii
performed the best on this ide of the
scrimmage line, smearing many of
fensive plays as they reached the
line.
Some practice in recovering fum
bles behind the line of scrimmage whs
included in the scrimmage work. The
ffensive team had the advantage
most of the time on account of its
greater strength, the defensive line
ing composed of only six men.
The field was rather soft yester
day, and did not permit of many
pen plays. If the weather continues
fair, the ground ought to be in shape
for practice today and the remainder
of the week.
UNIVERSITY OF CALD70RNIA
Buy a pair of garters, my boy, buy
a pair of garters,' is the bit of fath
erly advice being given by members
of the Infirmary staff to male stu
dents asking the why and wherefore
of colds that seemingly can not be
cured. -
Since the garter became a social
outcast and fashion decreed that
socks should be worn draped care
lessly around the tops of tan ox
fords, the Infirmary records show
an enormous increase in the number
of colds treated.
The staff agrees that the practice
of allowing the chill morning air to
circulate freely around exposed
ankles is one of the princioal causes.
They are therefore Including in all
prescriptions an item that can better
be secured at a haberdashery than
a drug store.
Oklahoma Authorities Allow Women
Dates Until 1:30 St. Patrick's Day
Administration Makes Excep
tion to Rules for Annual
Engineers' Festival.
Women at the University of Okla
homa recently reached their houses as
late as 1:30 in the morning under
male escort and didn't have to stand
anxiously by while friend escort
threw gravel at the open window of
an obliging roommate to get her to
sneak down t'ie back way and un
hook the ba k Juor.
For the first time in the history of
the institution the University auth
orities agreed to extend the date
period until 1 :30 in order that women
might witness the opening of the St
Patrick's day when students in col
lege of Engineering welcomed the
coming day with a fireworks display.
Dates for the display began at
11:30 Monday night and ended at
RECEIYE SUGAR SPECIMENS
High School Exhibits Show Process
of Manufacture
Twenty sets of specimens showing
the processes tn beet-sugar manufac
ture will be available for Nebraska
high schools. They come from the
Great Western Beet Sugar Co. of
Scotts Bluffs, and may be obtained
through the Conservation and Survey
division of the University of Nebras
ka. Classes in agricultural industry
should find the specimens of particu
lar interest
FRANKFORTER WILL
GIVE OPEN LECTURE
"Manufacture and Use of Ex
plosives," Is Topic of Talk
in Chemistry Hall.
C. J. Frankf orter, assistant profes
sor of chemistry, will be the speaker
at an open lecture to be held Thurs
day evening at 8 o'clock in the lec
ture room of Chemistry Hall. His
topic will be "The Manufacture and
Use of Explosives."
Members of Phi Xrjbda Upsilon,
honorary chemistry fraternity, w..I
also be chosen at the meeting. The
fraternity is made up of men vho
have high scholastic averages in
chemistry. Members are elected by
the active chapter with the adv'ce of
the faculty. At the present time there
are .eight members.
The lecture for the evening will
not be of a technical nature because
it is open to the public The more
common explosives will be taken up.
their commercial and military uses
being explained. Sixty samples of
explosives will be shown during the
lecture and two reels of motion pic
tures, furnished by the Bureau of
Mines and the Hercules Powder
Company, will illustrate the speech.
A new use for flesh-colored hose
was recently discovered when a pro
fessor got suspicious at West Vir
ginia Wesleyan and carried on an in
vestigation which brought out the
startling fact that women were
inscribing notes on their ankles
which became easily visible when
flesh-colored hose was drawn tight
The psychology department of
Temple University has abolished all
examinations in the belief that they
are inaccurate, antiquated, and influ
enced by personalities.
Dancing Is Most Popular Recreation
At Oklahoma, Investigation Shows
Information compiled by a profes
sor of sociology at the University
of Oklahoma regarding the favorite
recreations of students showed that
dancing was the most popular cam
pus sport at that-institution. Ap
proximately 75 per cent of both
sexes answered his question by nam
irg the terpsichorean art as their
favorite amusement More women
than men placed dancing as their
first choice, however.
Three sports tied in popularity
with the women for second place
hiking, swimming and bridge. It was
thought that these diversions had
largely developed since the students
had enrolled in the University. Thir
teen more pastimes were listed in the
statistics, which are, listing them in
order of their popularity: Tennis,
skating, shows, reading, golf, motor
ing, traveling-, hunting, fishing, bas
ketball, football and basebalL
It is noticeable that the prefer
ence of the students was give largely
to outdoor sports rather than the
more quiet pastimes such as card-
playing and reading. This may be
explained by the fact that the stu
dents spend so much of their time
1:30 Tuesday, although women were
required to be in their houses from
10:30 till 11:30.
Hundreds of couples took advan
tage of this extension of time and at
tended the celebration. The display
by the engineers marked the begin
ning of the annual week of celebra
tion on the part of the engineers for
their patron saint
The first act in the celebration was
the firing of "Old Trusty," the mys
terious cannon owned by students in
the College of Engineering, that
makes itself heard only once a year
on this occasion. Miss Maude Gard
ner, engineers' queen, touched off
the cannon.
Besides the firing of the cannon,
the display consisted of the setting
off of a big supply of pryotechnics,
including the largest skyrockets avail
able. WIRE MANUFACTURE
IS SHOWN IN FILM
Engineers Will See Cinema
Showing Cable-making in
Friday Convocation.
"The Single Ridge," a three-reel
motion picture depicting the manu
facture of insulated wires and cables,
will be shown at the regular College
of Engineering convocation at 10
o'clock Friday morning in Mechani
cal Engineering 206. Prof. Clark E.
Mickey, chairman of the department
of civil engineering, will deliver the
lecture explanatory of the film.
Among the processes described will
be the gathering and treatment of
rubber, the drawing and treatment of
copper wire, the two methods of ap
plying the compound, the purpose
and results or tne vulcanizing pro
cess, and the various types and pur
poses of outer coverings.
SPECIAL LENTEN SERVICE
Is Held at Vespers; Quartette Sings
Tit Prayer Perfect"
A special Lenten devotional ser
vice was held at the regular Vesper
hour in Ellen Smith Hall Tuesday
evening at 5 o'clock. The service be
gan with music and meditation, and
was followed by reading from the
scripture by Agnes Kessler, on the
subject of the "Last Supper." After
further silent prayer and meditation.
a quartette composed of Thelma Mc-
Murray, Mary Doremus, Virginia
Neville, and Kathryn Dean sang
The Prayer Perfect" Ida Flader
Igave a reading, "The Sign of the
i Cross." An electrically lighted cross
has been arranged above the door of
the room where Vespers are held.
Next week the regular Passion ser
vice will be held.
All local fraternities, sororities
and house clubs at the University of
Michigan have passed into the finan
cial control of the university. They
will be required to submit plans,
with a financial budget to the local
committee before incurring any
debts against the fraternity.
Both fraternity and non-fraternity
men at the University of Chicago ob
ject to Dean E. II. Wilkin's idea that
fraternities are injurious to college
work. The interfraternity council
will take some sort of action on a
letter written them by Dean Wilkins.
indoors that they welcome any op
portunity to be out in the open.
Tennis was especially a favorite
among the men. They were also
strong for the major sports although
they listed the "movies" for a higher
place than did the women. Men who
had been in some sort of vacational
business invariably chose golf as
their recreation. The charts made
from the data collected showed that
many of the men played golf every
afternoon that the weather permit
ted.
Baseball, football and basket
ball were exclusively choices of men
students. Women did not seem to
think that even basketball was an
interesting and profitable avocation.
Statistics were also collected re
garding the work done by students
in the summer vacation. Practically
all of them held some sort of posi
tion during the intermission between
school years. It was interesting that
few of the students were engaged in
the sort of vocation during the sum
mer months that they in' ded to
follow after they received Mr de
gree. Pedagogy was the ch) field
for the women students, but U-v nen
differed widely in their choices.
MAT MEET TO :
START TODAY
Preliminaries of Interfratern
ity Wrestling Tourney
Run from 4 to 6.
ADMISSION WILL BE
FREE THIS AFTERNOON
The preliminaries of the first in
terfraternity wrestling meet will be
held this afternoon between 4 and
6 o'clock in the west end of the Ar
mory. Semi-finals and finals will be
held Thursday and Friday afternoon
at 4 o'clock. Admission to all pre
liminaries will be free. A fee of ten
cents will be charged for semi-finals.
Two rings will be used in the
preliminaries, so the meet will be
finished in good time.
Fourteen fraternities were enter
ed at the time of the drawings last
night Contestants are advised to
weigh in at 11 o'clock the morning,
before the meet All those who
drew a bye, with the exception of
those in the 108-pound class, will
wrestle tonight All others will have
two bouts today. This was made
possible by " shortening the time , to
six-minute bouts.
The drawings were made at 5
o'clock at the office of Dr. Clapp,
and results were as follows:
108-Pound Class
Newman, Zeta Beta Tau; Bye.
Smith, Acacia; Bye.
115-Pound Class
Noble1, Delta Chi; Webb, Alpha
Gamma Rho.
Rawlins, Kappa Sigma; Cooper,
Alpha Theta Chi
Williams, Alpha Delta; Warren,
Sigma Nu.
Treadwell, Pi Kappa Alpha; Bye.
125-Pound Class
Bengston, Sigma Alpha Epsilon;
Bye.
Pickard, Delta Chi; Bye.
Gettman, Pi Kappa Alpha; Bye.
Wilkinson, Phi Tau Epsilon; Slon-
iger, Kappa Sigma. '
Dickey, Delta Sigma; Buck, Alpha
Gamma Rho.
Schlentx, Alpha Delta; Bye. '"
Morrisey, Sigma Nu, Bye.
Theodore, Zeta Beta Tau, Bye.
135-Pound Class
Randolph, Lambda Chi Alpha;
Bye.
Robertson, Sigma Alpha Epsilon;
Taylor, Alpha Delta.
Dexter, Phi Tau Epsilon; Eck-
strom. Alpha Theta Chi.
Buck, Alpha Gamma Rho; Schro- (
yer, Sigma Nu.
Stephenson, Acacia; Gugenheim,
Zeta Beta Tau.
Nedrow, Phi Kappa Alpha; Mur
phy, Kappa Sigma.
Winch, Delta Sigma; Bye.
Campbell, Delta ChL
145-Pound Class
Lang, Phi Tau Epsilon; Bye.
Olanskey, Zeta Beta Tau; Kendall,
Alpha Gamma Rho.
Moulton, Alpha Theta Chi; lear-
sley, Alpha Delta.
Gardner, Sigma Nu; Otten, Sigma
Alpha Epsilon.
Maunn, Kappa Sigma; Johnson,
Delta ChL
Posvar, Silver Lynx; Armstrong,
Lambda Chi Alpha.
Hirschman, Delta Sigma; Bolen,
Acacia.
Choate, Pi Kappa Alpha; Bye.
158-pound Class.
Gerelick, Zeta Beta Tau; bye.
Gillilan, Delta Chi; Hobson, Phi
Tau Epsilon.
Robertson, Kappa Sigma; Wilson,
Sigma Nu.
Kohler, Alpha Theta Chi; Eddy,
Acacia.
Ryne, Delta Sigma; Lewis, Alpja
Gamma Rho.
Lee. Phi Kappa Alpha; Wells,
Lambda Chi Alpha.
Schram, Sigma Alpha EpsUon; bye.
Hinton, Alpha Delta; bye.
175-pound Class.
Drummond, Delta Chi; bye.
Peaker, Kappa Sigma; bye.
Franklin. Zeta Beta Tau; Chaloup-
ka. Alpha Theta ChL
Waldo, Alpha Gamma Rho; De-
Witz, Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Gilliland, Sigma Nu; Carlson, Al
pha Delta.
Toft Acacia; bye.
Negus, Pi Kappa Alpha; bye.
Mark, Phi Tau Epsilon; bye.
Heavyweight Class.
Dnrisch, Delta Chi; bye.
Eckberg, Alpha Delta; bye.
Randall, Pi Kappa Alpha; bye.
Chaiken, Zeta Beta Tau; Casey,
Lambda Chi Alpha.
Aksamit Alpha Theta Chi; Fisher,
Sigma Nu.
Hahlbeck, Acacia; bye.
Mandery, Kappa S'ima; bye.
Thompsen, Sigma Alpha Epsilon;
bye.
Swarthy Mexican vaquerot re
cently invaded the campus at the
University of California wearing
broad brimmed sombreros and bril
liant Spanish sashes. Instead of
knives, the invaders carried the
Mexican Athlete number cf the Teli
can, California's Awjven.