The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 29, 1925, Image 1

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    The Daily Nebraskan
VOL. XXV. NO. 50.
THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, 'SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1925.
TRICE 5 CENTS.
BUCKNER IS
HONOR GUEST
AT REUNION
Former Member of "Think
Shop" Reunite at Home
Of Professor Fogg N
WAS GRADUATE OF 1904
Speech" by Prominent Nebraska
Alnmni Who Have Worked
In Debt Are Featured
Lincoln members of the Univer
sity of Nebraska intercollegiate de
bate seminary, or "think shop," hon
ored Emory R. Buckner, A. B. '04,
New York district attorney, at a re
union Friday evening at the home of
lYof. M. M. Fogg, founder and direc
tor of the "think shop" for the last
twenty-four years.
Mr. Buckner represented the Uni
verse in the debates with Kansas in
1903 and 1904. He was graduated
with Phi Beta Kappa honors in 1904,
and entered the Harvard law school
from which he graduated cum laude
in 1907. As an active attorney he
has won an enviable reputation in
New York City, and his sensational
padlocking proceedings in enforcing
the Eighteenth Amendment since his
appointment as United States attor
ney for the southern district of New
, York, have attracted attention from
all parts of the country.
Professor Fogg, introducing Mr.
Buckner, sketched his meteoric career
as a lawyer and told of the record
which he had made while a University
student.
.TelU of Experience
Mr. Buckner spoke briefly and en
tertainingly of his college career, des
cribing the manner in which he com
pleted a roology course despite se
vere obstacles, and other amusing
incidents of undergraduate days.
George A. Lee, '03, (Phi Beta Kap
pa), Law 05, (Order of the Coif),
general counsel for the Continental
Gas and Electric Company, spoke as
a debating team collegue of Mr. Buck
ner. He was a member of the Ne
braska team against Kansas in 1903,
which so impressed Chancellor Strong
of Kansas, who was presiding, that he
declared after the debate : "I feel as
if I had been on an express train go
ing through a cyclone."
W. L. Bates, '12, former regent
of the University, told of his experi
ences as a college debater; and Cliff
ord L. Rein, '13, Law '15, J. D. '21,
spoke on the value of such training
as is given by argumentation and de
bate courses.
Chancellor Avery Speaks
Chancellor Samuel Avery spoke o'
the work of the "think shop" and the
high place its members have taken in
professional and public life. Dean
Warren Seavey of the College of Law
and Dean Herman G. James of the
College of Arts and Sciences were in
troduced. The "think shop" members present
were :
Joseph Albin, ex-Law '13, (Iowa
1910). Secretary Liberty Life In
surance Company.
W. L. Bates, '12, real estate. For
mer Regent of the University.
Wendell Berge, '25, Law '27.
(South Dakota 1922, 1924; Iowa
1923.)
Ralph Brooks, '25, Law '27. (So.
Dakota 1925.)
Fred C. Campbell, Law '22. (Iowa
1921, 1922). Insurance.
Guy C. Chambers, Law '16 (Order
of the Coif). (Kansas 1916). Law
yer. Lecturer, College of Law, Uni
versity of Nebraska.
C. L. Clark, '12, Law '14 (Wiscon
sin 1910, Iowa 19 11). Lawyer.
Hugh B.'Cox, '26, (South Dakota
1923; Iowa 1924.)
Louis B. Finkelstein, Law '22, (Io
wa 1920, 1921.) Lawyer.
Bernard GradwohL '23, (Phi Beta
Kappa), Law '24 (cum laude, Order
(Continued on Page Three.)
University Extension
Bulletins Are Liste
Publications of the University Ex
tension Division are listed in the cur
rent issue of the University Extension
News. Bulletins of general interest
include: "Government Under the
Constitution," a series of ten papers
prepared under the direction of the
Citizenship committee of the Nebras
ka Bar Association; "Lessons In the
Latin Subjunctive," Prof. F. W. San
fwd; "Handbook for Nebraska Citi
zens," Grace M. Wheeler; and "Cur
riculum for the Kindergarten, First,
Second and Third Grades," by the
kindergarten-primary department of
the Teachers Collet.
Weather Forecast
Sunday: Partly cloudy and warn
er.
Makes Statement On
"Victory Vacation"
Following a special meeting
held Saturday morning Mortar
Board made public the following
statement:
"Mortar Board, honorary socie
ty for senior women, disapproves
of the extremes to which excite
ment was carried in connection
with the Thanksgiving football
game. The group feels that the
action of a minority was not rep
resentative of the student body as
a whole, and regrets the manner
in which academic work of the
institution was interrupted."
OFFER PRIZES
FOR COSTUMES
Women's Cornhusker Costume
Party Will Be Held Fri
day December 11
COMMITTEES ARE NAMED
The Girls' Cornhusker Costume
party will be held in the Armory,
Friday, December 11. The same
evening the Cornhusker Banquet will
be held for men. The party will
last from 7:30 until 10:30 o'clock,
and the admission will be 25 cents.
Prizes for the cleverest, the most
unique and the prettiest costumes
will be given. The grand march is
to take place about 8 o'clock, and
at which time the judge will look at
the costumes. The awarding of the
prizes will take place early in the
evening.
The Tassels, Mystic Fish, Xi Delta
and Silver Serpents will each give a
stunt. Music throughout the even
ing will be furnished by a six-piece
orchestra of girls.
The members of the Mortar Board
will be in charge of the concessions
and will sell ice cream, sandwiches
and pop.
The general committee for the par
ty follows: Katherine McWhinnie,
chairman; Oral Rose Jack, assistant
chairman; Dorothy Olmstead, Doro
thea Dawson, Doris Pinkerton and
Henrietta Dierks.
Publicity: Elive Holovotchiner and
Millicent Ginn.
IIORTAR BOARDS
TO CONVENE HERE
Sectional Convention of Senior Wo
men's Honorary Order Starts
Saturday
A convention of the chapters of
Mortar Board, honorary society for
senior women, at the Universities of
Texas, Oklahoma, Colorado, Missouri
Kansas and Nebraska, will be held
here December 5 and 6. Alumnae
and active members of Black Masque,
the hostess chapter, will participate
with the delegates in the sessions
which will open at 11:30 Saturday.
Miss Alene Smith, sectional direc
tor, will represent the national or
ganization at the convention. A
program of discussion of fraternity
problems, reports and talks has
been arranged. The guests will be
entertained at luncheon at Ellen
Sm:th Hall and at a banquet in the
evening.
National conventions of the society
are held biennally. On the alternate
years sectional meetings are held.
PERSHING RIFLES PLEDGE
Ohio Chapter Of Baic Military Hon
orary Society I Active
Pershing Rifles at Ohio State Uni
versity which was installed last year
by the Nebraska mother company
recently pledged twenty-two fresh
men of the basic course. The Ohio
company holds meetings every Tues
day evening. A Browning Automatic
rifle class has been organized among
the sophomore members. The mem
bers have a distinctive uniform. A
formal Military Ball was given early
in November. Four cadet officers
were elected honorary members. Ii
is the policy of the Ohio company to
elec annually to honorary member
ship severtl members of the advanced
course to distinguish themselves in
the military department.
Students Meet With
Educational Bureau
Students who intend to teac'u iit
year met last week under the direc
tion of the Bureau of Educational
Service to register and submit their
qualifications for teaching positions.
The object of the bureau is to hel
all Teachers College student and
others who desire teaching postions
find such positions as they are best
prepared to fill.
HDSKERS END
SUCCESSFUL
GRID SEASON
Brilliant 17-0 Victory v Over
Rockne's Notre Dame
Team Is Climax
HAD OUTSTANDING TEAM
Win Over Illinois and Tie with
Washington Huskies Adds to
Nebraska's Prestige
With its victory over Notre Dame
Thanksgiving Day the Nebrsaka
football team closed a successful sea
son which included a victory over Il
linois and the famous "Red" Grange
and a 6 to 6 tie with the Washington
Huskies, Pacific coast champions.
Although the Cornhuskers were
beaten by two Valley teams and held
to a scoreless tie by another, Nebras
ka football fans are pointing to the
season's record with pride and main
taining that the Nebraska teams is
one of the outstanding teams in the
country.
By beating Notre Dame 1 7 to 0 be
fore the record breaking crowd of
41,000 spectators the Cornhuskers
not only put a fitting climax on their
successful season, but they also even
ed the score with the Irish. Both of
the teams have won five games.
The attendance record for the 1925
season was 119,000 which was an in
crease of 20,000 over the 1924 sea
son. Win Important Games
Nebraska repeated its perform-
'ances of 192 and 1923 in defeating
Notre Dame. The lvaders wore
very strong favorites to win, and only
one other team had won over them
this year1 the Army eleven. Be
yond that, Nebraska has something to
be more proud of. I nthe last four
year Notre Dame has lost four games.
Three of those losses were to Nebras
ka Cornhuskers.
The Huskers got the jump on the
Irish early in the game. With Rock
ne's second string starting the game
Nebraska received the ball on the
kick-off and immediately punted on
the first down. It was Captain Weir
who booted the ball, and it sailed high
and beautifully to the 6-yard line.
Notre Dame was penalized on the
enxt play and the ball came to rest
on th el-yard line. Notre Dame could
not succeed in plunging, and a pnut
was called for. Then come the break
of the game. Roach was hurried and
his punt was a fizzle; it was wide and
went out of bounds on Notre Dame's
7-yard line.
A plunge at center by Rhodes net
ted 1 yard; Choppy went off left
guard for two more; and then with
beautiful interference drove off left
tackle for the touchdown. Weir
place-kicked the extra point and Ne
braska was seven points in the lead.
All this happened within three min
utes of the opening whistle.
Rockne sat tight His second team
stayed in the game, and received Ed
Weir's kickoff over the goal line and
took the ball out on the 20-yard line.
Notre Dame again was forced to punt
and the kick was only good for twen
ty yards. After plunges by Rhodes
and Dailey, Jug Brown hurled a pass
to Mandery which was good for 16
yards, placing the ball on the Notre
Dame 27-yard line.
A Nebraska penalty gave Notre
Dame a slight advantage, and Weir
soon punted over the goal line and
Notre Dame brought the ball out 20
yards.
The second Nebraska touchdown
came as the direct result of the pas?
from Brown to Mandery. The ball
was in mid-field when Rhodes gained
13 yards off tackle.. With the baP
in the 32-yard line. Brown's pass to
Mandery was good, and he ran the
-emaining 20 yards for a score. Ed
"Veir's place kick was good. Score
Nebraska 14; Notre Dame 0.
It was then that Rockne sent in hi'
'irst team, but they were unable tr
Tore on the Huskers. They held thf
'ebraka team better than the sec
-nds had done, but they were unablr
to do anything in the way of scoring
Nebraska had a distinct edge on
the regulars as well as on the seconds
lotre Dame completed only one pas'
out of the many tries, several of these
eing intercepted by the Hosiers.
In the third quarter the Huskers
rew down to Notre Dame's 15-yard
ine and Weir place-kicked a field
yoal, standing on the 25-yard line.
rhatmade the score 17 to 0.
The fourth quarter failed to pro
duce a Notre Dame score and Nebras
ka won the game on sheer fight and
spirit.
Jorjrensen Attends
Hi-Y Club Meeting
Arthur Jorgenson, secretary of the
University Y. M. C A., attended the
conf a-ence of Hi-Y leaders at Beat-
Irks last week, speaking on "The Bays
of Other Lands." Joseph Reeves,
'29, state president of the Hi-Y clubs,
attended a similar conference at Has
tings.
Raymond Fosdick Who
Will Address World Court
LeROSSIGNOL
WILL SPEAK
World Forum to Hear Dean
Of Bizad College on
Wednesday
IS GRADUADTE OF McGILL
Dean J. E. LeRossingol of the Col
lege of Business Administration, will
speak at the World Forum luncheon
at the Grand Hotel Wednesday noon
on the subject "How Soon Should
Specialized Training Begin?"
The question of specialized train
ing is one which is much discussed
in educational circles today. Some
hold that a general training such as
the Arts College seeks to give should
preceed specialized work. Others
maintain that the two can be com
bined. Dean LeRossingol has been con
nected with the University since
1911 and has been dean of the Col
lege of Business Administratino since
its foundation in 1919. He is a
graduate of McGill University, Mont
real, Canada, and has had good op
portunity to view the English educa
tional system in operation. The Eng
glish emphasize cultural training be
ifore -specialized, practical work.
J The discussion this week is one of
the series o neducation which the For
I um is having this year.
Tickets may be bought at the Y. M.
jC. A. or the Y. W. C. A. offices,
j They are twenty-five cents
CONGREGATIONAL
CENTER PURCHASED
Location of New Student Center Is
At 1504 Q Take Possession
December 1
A residence which will be used as
the Congregational University pas
tor's house has been bought at 1504
Q street by the Congregational con
ference of Nebraska. The place is
near the Baptist student parsonage
and the Presbyterian student manse,
and is across the alley from the Wes
lev Foundation parsonage on R street
With the expansion of 'the campus, it
will be in a very desirable location,
stated the Reverend Frederick Leav
itt, Congregational University pastor.
Possession of the house will be
given December 1, but according t
Rev. Leavitt it will not be occupied
until general alterations and repairs
-an be made The house itself is
"U suited to student activities, and
will be used until means are raised
o build a modern structure on thi
'ocat'on for the Congregational stu
ient center The fund for this pur-
ose has already been begun in a
'lint campaign by those interested in
Ooane college and the student pastor-
te at the University, and an active
;nmpaign will soon be launched, ac-
ord:ng to Rev. Leavitt.
AGS TO HONOR GRIDSTERS
Convocation For Players At Agri
cultural College Monday
A convocation . in honor of the
members of the Nebraska football
team who are registered in the Col
lege of Agriculture will be held Mon
day morning at 11 o'clock in the as
sembly room of Agricultural Hall on
the agr'.jltural campus.
The football team which scored so
decisive a victory Thanksgiving Day
includes a number of agricultural
students. The student body and fac
ulty of the college ere urged to at
tend the convocation which is to be
Alexander Writes For Magazine
The December issue of The Ne
braska Manufacturer contains an ar
ticle entitled 'The Symbolic Meaning
of Nebraska's Monumental Capitol"
by Dr. H. B. Alexander of the de
partment of philosophy.
FOSDICK WILL
ADDRESS WORLD
COURT MEETING
Famous Authority on Interna
' tional Relations Speaks
Wednesday
WAS AIDE TO PERSHING
Citizens of Lincoln as Well as Mem
bers of Faculty and Students
Invited to Attend
A great World Court convocation
will hear an address by Mr. Raymond
B. Fosdick of New York, noted auth
ority on world questions Wednesday,
December 2, at 10:30 o'clock, in St.
Paul's church. All students and
members of the faculty are urged to
attend and citizens of Lincoln will be
invited. Chancellor Avery will intro
duce Mr. Fosdick.
Coming from New York under the
auspices of the Councils of Christian
Associations Y. M. C. A. and the
Y. W. C. A. Mr. Fosdick is speaking
in a dozen middle Western college
and university centers. As former
under-secretary of the League of
Nations, member of the peace confer
ence, and civilian aide to General
Pershing in 1919, Mr. Fosdick is con
sidered one of the best informed men
in America on questions of interna
tional relations.
Following the morning convocation
Mr. Fosdick will speak at a luncheon
given by the Chamber of Commerce
to which a group of buisness and pro
fessional men and women will be in
vited. This dinner will be sponsored
by the Lincoln Branch of the League
of Nations Non-Partisan Association
and the Lincoln World Court Com
mittee. The "Y" organizations have
issued sepcial invitations to members
of the faculty for this luncheon.
Mr. Fosdick was graduated from
Princeton in 1905 and received a
Master's Degree in the following
year. In 1908 he was graduated
from the New Yoflc Law School. He
is a member of the Phi Beta Kappa
and Delta Upsilon, as well as the Am
erican Academy of Folitieal and So
cial Science, American Institute of
International Law and the Board of
Trustees of the Rockefeller Institute.
During the war, Mr. Fosdick was in
charge of training camp activities of
the war and navy departments, was
a special representative of the war
department in France from 1916 to
1919, after which he was civilian aide
to General Pershing. He is now a
member of the law firm of Curtis,
Fosdick and Bclknan.
HELEN HOWE HEADS DELIANS
New Officers Are Chosen at Meeting
Of the Society Monday Night
Helen Howe was elected president
of the Del yian Literary Society at a
meeting held last Monday night. The
newly elected officers are: Vera
Coupe, vice-president; Theo. Classen,
secretary; James Rooney, treasurer;
Adrian Hull, artist, and Mary Lawliss,
sergeant-at-arms.
Leila Benedict, Ruth Brooks, Lydia
Brooks and Anna May Alpers were
pledged to the organization.
ORGANIZE GROUP
FOR DISCUSSIONS
Freshmen Women Will Be Chosen
By Y. W. C. A. to Meet Every
Thursday Evening
A group chosen from freshmen
women of the University every year
by the Y. W. C. A. will be organized
Thursday night.
The group is chosen from among
all freshmen women of the University
according to scholastic standing this
year, and will meet every Thursday
night for the ttudy of University
problems as they affect the women
of the school. The group also is for
the purpose of promoting friendship
and meets at dinner throughout the
year.
In former years the members were
chosen by the women in charge of
the organization, but this year any
freshman woman in the University is
eligible for membership. Although
the customary number in the organi
zation has been from twenty-five to
thirty, it will not be limited this year.
Girls interested in becoming con
nected with the group are asked to
turn in their names at the Y. W. C. A.
before Thursday.
Plan Charter Day Exercises
Preliminary plans lor Charier Dy
exercises are now being made by the
University Alumni Association. Ar
rangenemt will be made to broadcast
a program of music snd addresses for
the benefit of former students in all
parts of the country as has been done
in former years.
Buckner Will Address
Law Students Monday
Emory R. Buckner, '04, will ad
dress the class in argumentative
composition, of which he was once
a member, and the members of the
College of Law at 9 o'clock Mon
day morning in Law 101. Other
members of the University will be
admitted to the capacity of the
room. His subject will be "Legal
Education."
Monday evening he will speak
on "Uncle Sam as a Clinet" at a
banquet at the Lincoln Hotel
given for him by the Lancaster
County Bar Association.
BIZAD BANQUET
IS WEDNESDAY
Dean LeRossignol Will Act As
Toastmaster Avery
To Make Speech
ROY PITZER IS IN CHARGE
Annual Bizad banquet, sponsored
by the Men's Commercial Club of the
University, will be held Wednesday
evening, December 2, at 6 o'clock at
the Lincoln Chamber of Commerce.
Dean LeRossignal, of the Bizad col
lege, will act as toastmaster. Roy
Pitzer, '26. is chairman of the com
mittee in charge of the banquet.
Other speakers will be: Chancellor
Avery, O. J. Fee, Dr. Grather, Profes
sor of Marketing and Advertising;
Melvin Kern, '27, president of the
Men's Commercial Club, and Doris
Loeffel, '26, president of the Girls'
Commercial Club.
Guests of the college will be R. E.
Guenzel, Nathan Gold, J. E. Miller,
W. E. Barkley, and other prominent
Lincoln business men.
Music will be furnished by the Has
tonian orchestra. The committee in
charge is Roy Pitzer, chairman, Erwin
Domeier, Dick Brown, Don Frush,
Mervin Kern, Don Becker and Del-
bert Forsberg.
Tickets for the banquet will be sold
in classses on the third floor of the
Social Science building, and by mem
bers of Alpha Kappa Psi and Delta
Sigma PL
STUDENTS TAKE
LEAD IN CHINA
Explains Rev. Gilbert Lovell in Ad
dress to Y. W. C. A. Work
ers Wednesday
"The students are taking the lead
in the Chinese rennaissance," was the
statement made at a luncheon of the
Grace Coppock staff last week j
by Dr. Gilbert Lovell of Oberlin, O.,
of the department of vocational coun
sel of the Presbyterian church.
"They are determined to save
China for the Chinese," the speaker
continued. "The students themselves
say they are not bolsheviki, anti-for-
ingners, nor anti-anything, but are
just making a plea for China.
"The Chinese system of education
:s patterned after that of the United
States, where it was formerly pat
terned after those of Japan and Ger
many. There is co-education in the
primary grades but only in three uni
versities. "The president of one girls school
said, 'We are bound as to our feet,
our mirds and our customs. We
must emancipate the Chinese wo
men." In speaking of Miss Grace Coppock,
a Nebraska alumna who worked a
number of years among the Chinese
women, work which is still supported
by contributions of Nebraska women
students, he said:
"Miss Coppock had a reputation all
along the Chinese coast. She "whs
known as a woman who stood for a
kindf deep and rich fellowship with
God and who exercised power in her
daily life. Her death was a loss to
Chi- .a and to Chinese women."
Race Problems Are of
Interest to Students
Results of the questionnaire sent
out by the Y. W.-Y. M .C. A. Estes
Park conference committee, of which
Arthur Jorgenson and Miss Erma Ap
pleby o fthe University of Nebraska
are chairr"n, indicate that discussion
of race problems is of especial in
terest to students in universities and
colleges of the middle-western re
gion. A large proportion of thise
suggesting subjects for study at the
conference mentioned some phase of
the r2 rrob!??T TK amoriation
committees have ahxady arranged
for lectures by Miss Julia Deuriott,
national Y. W. C. A. secretary for the
colored women, at these schools dur
ing the winter, and will probably In
clude such qvestions in the confer
ence program.
PRACTICE FOR
CAGE ARTISTS
STARTS MONDAY
Husker Chances Helped by Re
turn of Five Letter Men
This Year
BEARG WILL COACH TEAM
Season Begins December 18 With
Game Against University of
South Dakota
Basketball, the winter season suc
cessor of football, in the realm of
college sports, will make its first of
ficial practice appearance on the Uni
versity of Nebraska campus tomorrow
afternoon at 4 :00 o'clock in the Ar
mory when the Cornhusker cage can
didates will report for their initial
workout under Coach E. E. Bearg,
who piloted the football machine
through a successful season, and now
takes the helm in the indoor game.
The cage season proper will open
at home December 18, with a game in
the Armory against the University
of South Dakota. This will be first
game in years with the Dakota school
and is expected to give the team a
real contest in preparation for the
seires of games early in January.
The contract for the Dakota game
was not completd until Saturday. It
completes the Husker schedule which
consists of eighteen games.
The completion of the new field
house which will permit crowds of
several times the size that could be
packed into the Armory, will raise
basketball to a premier position
among indoor sports. Most of the
games except the early season ones,
will be played on the field house
floor, which, though not to be com
pleted entirely until later in spring,
will be used as early as the stadium
was used in 1923.
Five Lettermen Return
Five letter men will greet Coach
Bearg in the initial call for practice. '
They are Beerkle, Smaha, Eckstrom,
Andreson and Black. All of them
played forward most of the season
last year.
Last year under Coach Kline the
University of Nebraska basketball
team rose up from a second division
rating to second place in the Valley. "
The five man defense was a feature
of the Husker march upward.
Bearg coached basketball at the
University of Illinois before coming
to Nebraska, and the fans are look
ing forward to as successful a bas
ketball team under him, as the foot
ball team he produced that won
victories over Illinois and Notre
Dame, and tied Washington, the
pride of the coast.
As assistant coaches Bearg will
have Owen Frank and Dick Newman,
both former Nebraska football and
basketball stars. Frank has been as
sistant coach and scout for several
years. The two will have charge of
the freshman squad.
PLAYERS MAKE BIG
HIT INjPOLLYANNA
Miss Hubbard and Herbert Ye one
Are in Charge of Production
Miss Gellately in Role
A finished performance with clev
er touches accentuating each point
and enhancing the value of the play,
the University Players presented in
their Children's Theater Saturday af
ternoon and evening, "Pollyanna" by
Catherine Cushing.
The role of Pollyanna was fortun
ately placed in the care of Pauline
Gellately and in the making of this
characterization she gave one of the
finest interpretations. Paul Bogan
as Jimmy Bean Jr., caused particu
lar enthusiasm For a child-actor, his
work was particulorly well done.
Nancy was another featured member
of the cast.
In the matter of atmosphere and
detail, the production of "Pollyonna"
was a great credit to all concerned,
actors and directors. Miss Fern H.
Hubbard and Herbert Yenne were in
charge of the production.
The cast of the play was as follows :
Mrs. Carmody Ruth Jamison
Mrs. Gregg Elizabeth Tracy
Miss Carroll Ida May Flader
Nancy Cleo Slagcl
Poy Harrington Coleita Aiiken
Jimmy Bean, Jr. Paul Bogan
John Pendelton Kenneth Cook
Dr. Chilton Jo Erasr.e
Bleecher Paul Pence
Jimmy Bean, Sr. Henry L y
Pollyanna WhittierPauline Gelkt: :y
Chaff eur Don Hebrnisdoerior
Receive New Life Members
Twelve life memberships have be: n
received by the Alumni association
headquarters this month, mukir 7 a
total of 362. A life membership s
the association costs 25, t-. ' '
vithin five years, and exerr;t3 :
holder from payment of the re :
dries cf J2 a yesr.
i