The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 04, 1927, Image 1

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    The Daily Nebraskan
LEATHER FORECAST
coin and vicinity: Mostly la.r
For
Lin
Friday
vu."--. , r
STAGE SET FOR
ANNUAL FROLIC
OF THEGREEKS
fr.wford'. Orchestra Arrives
At Pan Hel Ball
spRlNG irCOLOR SCHEME
Decoration. Abound With
Bright Colors; Many
Tickets Sold
Jack Crnwfo J and his 10 piece
Chicago Ja Band arrive this after
noon to fill their engagement at the
FM Hellenic Hall tomorrow night.
An orchestra such as Crawford's with
M exquisitely decorated ball room
ure the success of this year's
-Frolic of the Greeks." The affair
will take place at the Scottish Rite
Temple at 9:00 o'clock.
The Tan Hel will mark the first
sppearance of Crawford and his or
chestra in Lincoln. He has just
completed a very successful season
in Chicnpo and is now on tour under
the management of the Music Cor
poration of America.
Although the orchestra is to be the
main feature of the evening, the
decorations are indeed worthy of
mention. An effort is being made
to decorate the Scottish Rite Temple
in way that will surpass all previous
attempts.
Spring colors will be used entirely
in tl e decorations. The present plan
Pisces the orchestra in a flower cover
ed pagoda in the center of the floor.
Flowers will also be used to cover
arches over the entrances. The spirit
of spring will be featured through
out. Special attention has been paid to
the lighting effects. The decorators
have devoted much time in' produc
ing a scheme that will harmonize
with the decorations.
Arrangements are being made with
local broacasting stations to broad
cast the music and entertainment of
the Pan Hel. The program will be
gin at 9:00 o'clock and continue until
11:30.
Crawford, who is known as the
"Clown Trince of Jazz," and his or
chestra are not only noted as
musicians but also as entertainers.
They present a mixed program of
excellent dance music and clever
comedy.
Ticket sales indicated that a large
number of students will enjoy the
Pan IU-1. This year all sales were
handled through representatives of
the Kosmet Klub in each of the Fra
ternities. This sytsem has proven to
be a success.
COEDS ANXIOUS TO
USE RIFLE RANGE
W. A. A. Find Ready Repone In
Initiating New Activity;
Score Practicing
The rifle range is being invaded
this week by scores of the fairer sex
anxious to learn the fascinating art
of hitting the bull's eye. Practices
started Monday and will continue six
weeks longer. The Woman's Athletic
Association is initiating this campus
activity and any co-ed may try out
for the Varsity team.
Telegraphic matches are being
held with the woman's teams of the
leading Universities of this country,
Porto P.ico and Hawaii. Individual
members of last year's team averag
ed higher scores than many of the
men. It is rumored that perhaps
.women's scores will be set this year
against some of those schools chal
lenged by the men.t
The range is open for practice and
instruction all day long. The signed
practice target not only provides an
attendance record, but will give
Helen Schrader, rifling; manager, a
basis for choosing the final team
members.
Muieum I Bniy Moving
The Museum and department of
geology i8 busy getting their mater
ial packed and moved over to their
new building, Morrill Hall, but the
offices of these departments will not
M moved until the workmen are
Practically all out of Morrill Hall.
Kindig aBd Mill. VUit Museum
Recent visitors to the Museum and
jj department of geology are: Ira
Kindig, a former student, now of
Beatrice. cMaA WoJ...j.it an4
William Mills of Los Angeles, who
caned this week.
H Story in Nature Magasine
'The Story of Seven Stowaways"
Marjorie ShanaXelt, secretary to
Barbour, an interesting story of
S ninil .
opossum and six young
Wh'ch came to Nebraska in a crate of
nsnas from British Honduras, ap
j n the last number of the Na
v ?a&aine. This is one of a num
W of
Seniors Scare First
Year Law Men; Post
Fake List of Grades
Freshmen law students were very
much excited Thursday morning to
find that their grades were already
posted. The commotion increased as
the various freshmen looked at them.
Irate students interviewed less per
turbed professors to see why so many
of the good students had failed and
why the poor ones hnd grades that
ranged from 90 to 100. Several
prominent freshmen law students,
not well known however for their
scholastic averages, received such
grades as 93 percent in crimes.
Professors were at a loss to ex
plain this fact since they denied nil
responsibility for the posted grades.
The mystery increased as more fresh
men with worried expressions ran
through the halls interviewing one
professor, then another.
Investigation showed that a group
of seniors was the cause of nil the
trouble; they had posted the grades
on an arbitrary scale to put a scare
in the freshmen.
Contributing Editors
Will Be Named Soon
The staff of contributing edi
tors for The Daily Nebraskan will
be announced early next week.
The editor is still considering ap
plications, and will be glad to in
terview prospective applicants in
the Nebraskan office any day from
3 to 4 o'clock. Qualifications in
the main are 1 a background for
successful editorial writing, 2
evidence of some literary ability,
3 willingness to contribute reg
ularly. LAX STUDENTS MAKE
DELAY IN YEARBOOK
Fraternity and Sorority Department
Halted by Failure to Order
Print Made
A delay in the make-up of the
fraternity and sorority pages for the
1927 Cornhusker has been caused by
students failing to call the photo
graphers and order prints to be made
for these sections, it was learned at
the yearbook office yesterday.
"Manv people have had pictures
taken for the class sections and have
let the matter drop, expecting that
their pictures will be put in the other
sections where they belong without
anv more trouble on their part. The
photographers, however, have put a
charge of fifty cents on each extra
print, and unless this is paid and they
are given the order for new prints
to be made for use m other sections,
they also let the matter drop," W.
F. Jones, editor of the annual, de
clared. When last year's prints are to be
used, the student should advise the
photoirrapher of this and pay the fee,
Jones continued. Otherwise the stu
dio is left under the impression that
no further prints are to be made.
The main cause of the delay is due
to students failing to provide for the
mkimr of a sufficient number oi
prints to be used in all of tho sec
tions they wish their pictures in. in
some cases people have had their
portraits made and failed to tell the
photographer what it was to, De usea
for. In this event no record at all is
kept for the Cornhusker.
it.mhiH of the staff are at pre
sent calling members of professional
and honorary fraternities, class of
ficers and class honoranes, urging
them to make immediate arrange
ments for having their pictures in
these sections.
MATMEN LEAVE
FOR MISSOURI
Seven Ha.ker Wre.tler. Journey To
Meet Tiger Crappler
Thi. Week End
v. VoAintr And his Nebraska
matmen will leave this afternoon at
1-45 o'clock for Columma,
where the Husker grapplers will meet
th Missouri Tigers in a Valley mat
contest this week end.
Seven wrestlers will make the trip
to Missouri. Davis will, represent -
braska in the heavy weignt a.v.slu
and Albro Lundy in the light-heavy
t m.MAM at S,t.
weight class. Joe -
AtrA Nebraska in me
i a ui win "
158 pound weight and Max arrCi,
Benedict in tne izo-poui.u
Luff will handle the 135-pound
weight andCish the 115 pound.
Two of the weights were undecid
. i irk whAn Albro Lun-
ea uniu .
dy, letterman of 1924 qualified for
the meet by throwing vu "vr .
w i ;rht. division.
Max Karrer of Benedict wrestled it
. a i 4 l 1 .inla
THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1927.
Many Colleges Already Aiding In
Peace Problems, Declares Lihby
Many colleges in the United States
are sending out teams of speakers to
urge the pr blem of world peace to
people of surrounding towns; two
Indiana colleges are doing this, and
Nebraska Central College already has
a team of speakers which has travell
ed 600 miles in their effort to con
vince people of the significance of
permanent world peace. This, ac
cording to Dr. Frederick J. Libby,
executive secretary of the Nationnl
Council for the Prevention of War,
is the real service Which all colleges
and schools may render in doing
their share towards the promotion of
peace and arbitration among the na
tions of the world in the future.
"The United States is the most
powerful nation in the world, and as
such will have a deciding voice from
NEXT VARSITY MAY
BE HELD IN ARMORY
Coliseum Not Available For Next
Party; Valentine Special
Will Feature Event
The next Varsity Party may be
held in Memorial Hall, it was made
known yesterday, following a meet
ing of the Varsity Party committee.
Complete plans have not yet been
drawn up but it was learned from an
authoritative source that the Colis
eum would not be available for that
evening.
Whether the floor will be used for
another purpose, or whether it has
been forbidden for party use be
cause of the two basketball games
which are so close together that it
would be useless to make the large
expenditure necessary to clear the
floor for the dance, it has not been
learned. It is certain, however, that
if there is a party it will not be held
in the Coliseum.
Original plans of the committee
included decorations for a huge Val
entine party. These plans have not
been completely discarded and it
seems the committee is very much in
favor of carrying them out regard
less of where the party is held.
LOCAL TEAM AIDS
IN INSTALLATION
Phi Kappa Send Member to Initall
New Chapter at Denver
Thi Week End
Denver, Colo., February 3. A de
gree team from the University of
Nebraska chapter of Phi Kappa will
install Kappa Phi Delta, a local frat
ernity at the University of Denver,
here this week end, as Phi chapter
of the national organization of Phi
Kappa.
Kappa Phi Delta, which was or
ganized at Denver University in
1923, was unanimously accepted as
the only chapter to be admitted to
Phi Kappa this year at the Phi Kappa
national conclave held in Pittsburgh
last December. Twenty-one men will
be inducted by the visiting chapter
from Nebraska.
Walter A. Houck and Luke Lin-
. t . AM.if i,r anil
nan, national supreme oc-i !. j ...
president respectively, will accom
pany the installing chapter from Lin
coin to Denver, and will assist in the
ceremonies. The ceremonies will be
concluded Saturday evening with a
banquet at the Brown Palace.
Oklahoma Plans Tour
Into Mexican Cities
Norman. Feb. 3. (Special) En
rollments already are being received
for the University of Oklahoma s
second annual educational tour to
Mexico, according to L. B. r ritts, ex
tension organizer who conducts the
party each summer.
Tjiat vear 18 persons, most of them
teachers of Spanish in high schools
ftf the state, enrolled in the course
which included eight weeks of class
work in the National University or
Mexico Citv. Arrangements are being
made to take as many as 60 students
on the trip next summer.
Thns tflkine the trip are required
to pay a small registration fee, and
to pay their expenses on the trip,
which includes several days of sight
seeing on the way to Mexico City ana
return, with side-trips each week-end.
of those who were in
cluded in last year's party averaged
slightly over $250 for the nine
weeks' excursion, .'ritts. who acts as
guide and interpreter for che party,
cent a number or years m educa
tional work in Mexico.
Veniuelan GeoIogil Lecture
Clarence L. Lee '26, geologist
from the Laeo Petroleum Corpora
inn of Maracaibo, Venzuela, lec
tured to classes in oil geology In the
department of geology on Thursday
now on as to whether there will be
peace or war," he declared. "It is
our purpose to educate the youth of
the world to the fact that people may
be heroes in a constructive manner,
and thus encourage the tendency
away from thoughts of warfure."
Ho pointed out that fact that of the
heroes selected by school children
tho world over last year, in the con
test for twelve greatest figures in
the world, many, such as Pasteur,
Gutenberg, and Livingston, wre
chosen for their constructive work to
humanity, along with George Wash
ington, Abraham Lincoln, and others.
This final selection, by school child
ren of the world, is, in Dr. Libby's
opinion, a marked step in the path
to world peace, which must be
achieved for the sake of society's
actual existence in the future.
LeRossignol
Receives Note
. FromJapanese
Dean J. E. LeRossignol, of the
College of Business Administration
has just received a letter from Kisa
buro Kawabe of Japan thanking him
for copies of two of his books which
he sent to Mr. Kawabe. Mr. Kawabe,
who is a teacher in law, economics,
and English in the Matsue Koto-
Gakko (Matsue National College) of
The City of Matsue, Japan, mentions
that he has studied under Professor
George E. Howard of the University
of Nebraska.
Mr. Kawabe wrote to Mr. LeRos
signol last year in reference to the
sources of his book 'What is Social
ism' and he sent back the requested
information and copies of his two
books, 'Economics For Every Man'
and 'First Econmics.' In this latest
letter acknwledging receipt of the
books, Mr. Kawabe states that he is
recommending the books to his stu
dents for reference. All text-books
in that college are in Japanese and
the reference books in English and
German. He is sending to Mr. Le
Rossignol a book of his writing,
'Principles of Sociology', written in
Japanese with an English list of its
contents added to its last. part. Mr.
LeRossignol says that he has read
the table of contents and hopes to
reid the book at his leisure.
TT,, T3To A.railaKlA
Many Books Available
At Student h.XChange
A large number of books are still
being turned into the Student Book
Exchange, located in the University
Y. M. C. A. Around fifty
nrnnenr. in on inursuav.
Sales are falling off due to the
fact that many of the students had
purchased their books early in the
week. The Student Exchange will
have on hand books that are being
used this semester, as well as full
supply of books for the summer ses
sion, and the next fall session. Books
can still be brought in, and a fair
price set on the books between the
buyer and the seller.
Barbour Make Three Addresie
Prof. E. H. Barbour addressed the
Memorial Craftsmen of Nebraska on
the subject of "Building Stone",
Tuesday afternoon. He spoke to the
Lions Club Thursday noon, and ad
dressed the Legislative Ladies Lea
gue on "Morrill Hall" Thursday
afternoon.
Kania U. Enrollment Rank High
The enrollment at the University
of Kansas ranks it as twenty-first of
all colleges and universities of the
country.
Many Nationalities
Cosmopolitan Banquet 1 ms evening
The Student Friendship Banquet,
which is to be held this evening at
the Unitarian Church, is expected to
be a unique event in the hitsory of
the University Y. W. C. A., Y. M. C.
A., and the Cosmopolitan Club. It
is to be an ir. rnational dinner, with
as many races and nationalities re
presented among those attending and
in the program as possible. ine
menu is also to be representative of
various nations, as it is made up of
dishes characteristic of the different
countries.
There are many possibilities for
development of a greater feeling of
world fellowship among students on
the campus, for students from many
national groups and races are pres
ent. In the Cosmopolitan Club,
alone, there are about thirty Filipino
students, six Chinese, one Japanese,
three Russians, one Hawaiian, one
Portuirese Indian, one American
Indian, one Greek, one Polish and
one Korean student, three Italians
.nH few Scandinavians. There are
many negro students on our campus,
and also students from Mexico, Pan-
WOMEN SELECT
HONOR MEMBERS
May Queen, Maid of Honor,
And Mortar Board Nomina
tions Are Next Week
REVEALED ON IVY DAY
Nominations for the prospective
members of Mortar Board for the
year 1927-28 and the election of the
May Queen and the Maid of Honor
will be made by senior women Wed
nesday and Thursday of next week
from 9 to 5 o'clock. Tho pulls will he
in charge Of a group of Mortar
boards and will be placed in the cor
ridor of Social Science.
Names for May Queen and the
Maid of Honor will be placed on a
single ballot as in previous years.
The women receiving the highest
number of votes will be chosen as
May Queen, and the one receiving
the next highest number of votes will
be elected Maid of Honor.'The results
of the election will not be known un
til Ivy Day, when the May Queen and
her Maid of Honor will be publicly
presented and the members of Mor
tar Board will be masked.
A list of junior women will be
posted at the polls from which senior
women may select from five to fif
teen candidates for Mortar Board.
From the group of thirty women re
ceiving the highest number of votes
and having proper scholarship stand
ings the Mortar boards will be si lcet
ed. According to a ruling adoptei
in 1925 the personnel of the organi
zation may vary from five to fifteen
at the discretion of the active chap
ter. Y. M. C. A. STARTS
DISCUSSION GROUPS
Protection of Foreign. Interest Was
Subject Sunday; Other Pro
gram to Follow
The Lincoln Y. M. C. A. is holding
a series of discussions in the Y. M.
C. A. Gymnasium on Sunday after
noons. The first of the meetings was
held last week.
The subject held under discussion
dealt with the protection of foreign
interests abroad. This subject was of
(particular interest since the confis-
! cation of American interests in Nic-
Urngua A motion p.cture dealing
w;th a religious topic was shown, and
j music was rendered by the Y. M. C.
j. Orchestra.
A similar program is planned for
r.cxt Sunday. A motion picture will
wereiKo cVinwti si musical solo will also
be given. The topic for discussion
concerns the enforcement of law,
and when it should be enforced.
Judge Chappell, of Lincoln will
speak. The topic of prohibition, and
the eighteenth amendment will not
be taken into consideration at this
meeting.
Whitker Popular at Marathon
The men of Stanford University,
California, have instituted a mam
moth Marathon Whisker Contest to
last two weeks. The contest is open
to every rough in the university who
is able to raise a legitimate crop of
whiskers; no entrance fee is re
quired. Ten dollars and a beautiful
mug are offered as prizes to the con
testant whose whiskers furthest at
tain the acme of bushiness, length,
and general tonsorial health and ex
cellence. Oklahoma Pick Glee Club
Thirty-one men have been chosen
for the glee club to represent Okla
homa university at the Missouri Val
ley contest to be held at St Louis.
Represented At
ama, Korea, cngianu, rrantc, uu
Germany and other countries.
T7! 1 , TT HflJ
The Student Friendship Fund and
this movement for international fel
lowship and good will among students
seeks to further this work not only in
this country, but also in foreign
lands. Representatives from Nebras
ka to the National Student Confer
ence in Milwaukee heard many for
eign students speak in glowing terms
of the activities sponsored by the
Student Friendship Fund in their
countries. Many of those who were
there told how they had been per
sonally aided by the work carried on
by means of this fund.
Tf io nl.-ir.ned that a feeling of in
ternational goodwill andfellowship
will be promoted by the International
dinner Friday evening as well as
some money raised for the Student
Friendship Fund.' The program es
pecially, will carry out the interna
tional idea as it will be made up of
selections given by students in cos
tumes typical of certain countries,
and of musical selections by foreign
students on the campus.
Fling Will Lead Next
Sunday Meeting With
Biographical Sketch
Prof. F. M. Fling will read from
"Tho Private Papers of Henry Rye
croft," next Sundny afternoon be
tween 4 :30 and 6 o'clock at the Uni
versity Club, 1124 N Street. This is
largely an autobiographical sketch of
tho struggles and aspirations of
George U. Gissing, a celebrated writ
er. All young men who love hooks
are invited to these Sunday readings.
Mrs. Harriet Cruise Kemmer will
give several songs.
The following Sunday the Rever
end Mr. Levers, rector of the Church
of the Holy Trinity, will read selec
tions from the Writings of G. K.
Chesterton. Mr. II. I. Kirkpatrick of
the University School of Music will
arrange tho vocal numbers.
Professor Fling will introduce his
readings this Sunday with a chat
about some treasured volumes from
his private library.
STARRELS EXPLAINS
JUDAISM AT FORUM
Rabbi Dicue Jewih Religion at
Ag Forum; Committee Will
Continue Luncheon
Rabbi S. E. Starrels was the
speaker at the second luncheon of
the Agricultural College World
Forum, which was attended by over
sixty agricultural and home econ
omic students. He spoke on Judaism,
outlining in brief some of the c6n
ceptions of the Jewish religion.
In his address Rabbi Starrels de
clared that he likes to think of reli
gion as being full of fresh air and
sunshine, not as a closed chapter
with all prospects handed down with
out question. His conception of God
is not as a deity to be proven, but
rather a God which is the ideal of all
that is good, beautiful, and true. Ac
cording to the speaker the Hebrew
takes his God for granted. He also
pointed out that the Jewish faith was
the first to accept the idea of mono
theism and that under this concep
tion, it was impossible to think of a
Trinity.
The conception of Rabbi Starrels'
of the world and a future place is
'not that the earth is a place that has
lam-n in -ocukh - u ..jvu-
dofminr. hut rathpr a nlaee for man.
.... . ,.
a creature ot virtue, to exert nis
best efforts and bring about a future
world of peace, truth, and brotherly
love. He stated that his people do
not believe that heaven is a play
ground for "good Jewish boys and
girls," but a place to be shared by
the righteous of all peoples.
Tho Committee plans to continue
the luncheons, according to Anton
Frolik, '29, who was in charge of the
sale of tickets. A speaker for each
Thursday in February is being se
cured and plans being laid for a pro
gram of interest to the students of
the college during the remainder of
the semester.
Nineteen Hundred of
Oklahoma's Students
Help Earn Expenses
Norman, Feb. 3 (Special) More
than 1700 men and 200 women en
rolled in the University of Oklahoma
are earning all or part of their ex
penses while going to school holding
dowfi jobs of various sorts on and
around the campus, a check made by
the Y. M. C. A. revealed.
Men are employed in jobs ranging
from shining shoes to clerks and
waiting on tables, while girls' em
ployment ranges from working in
Norman homes to stenography and
teaching.
Geologists Receive
Geodes Concretions
The department of geology re
cently received two dozen large
geodes concretions from Burlington,
Iowa, of a type which are found in
no other part of the world so far as
is known. The geodal cavity of these
concretions is filled with oil. These
fine specimens were sent to the de
partment by J. P. Yoshida, ft former
student who specialized in chemistry
and geology at this University, and
who visited the Museum and the De
partment of Geology one day last
week.
Track Team's Shoes
Average 11 1-2 to 12
Norman, Feb. 3. (Special) Track
stars who are pictured as flying
around the cinder paths on nimble,
dainty feet, are few and far be
tween at the University of Oklahoma,
according to John Jacobs, track
coach, who believes his athletes have
bigger feet than those participating
in any other sport. The shoes re
quired by these track men average
between the sizes of 11 1-2 and 12.
PRICE 5 CENTS
ACACIA SWINGS
AHEAD IN GREEK
TRACK EVENTS
Sigma Nu Drops to Fourth
Place; Kappa Sigma
Is Second
ONLY FOUR MORE EVENTS
Seven Fraternities Conceeded
Chance to Gain Final
Honors in Meet
Acacia swung into first place
Thursday in the inter-fraternity in
door track meet while Sigma Nu,
loaders the first half of the week,
dropped to fourth place among the
twenty-nine competing teams. Kappa
Sigma rode on the rrest of a scoring
wave' that carried them from ninth
place Wednesday to second place
Thursday.
Theta Chi managed to remain in
third place through the stellar efforts
of Elkins and Dexter. The versatile
Indian, competing in his fifth event,
was an easy winner in the pole vault.
He is allowed to compete in one more
event in the moot. Dexter, running
his second distance race, took second
in the C60.
Raue, Connor and young Wyatt
were largely responsible for the sen
sational rise of Kappa Sigma. Raue
and Connor shared a three way tie
for second in the pole vault with Os
sian, the lone Delta Sigma Lambda
entry to date. Wyatt turned in a
fast 6C0 for third place in that event.
Four events remain before the
conclusion of the meet Saturday eve
ning. Any of the first seven teams
are ronceded a reasonable chance of
ending at the top of the heap. The
440 yard dash and the broad jump
will be run off this afternoon. Sat
urday afternoon, the meet will be
rounded out with the 50 yard high
hurdles and the 2 mile run.
Although Sigma Nu dropped to
fourth place Thursday, less than 500
points separates them from Acacia,
present leaders. Farm House and
Delta Tau Delta each moved up a
notch in the fourth day's competition
while the Sig Eps dropped from
fourth to seventh. Tau Kappa Epsi
lon also dropped, going from fifth to
eighth.
Snethen, Phi Delta Theta fresh-
whose 2:63 jn the ggn Wed
I .
;nesday topped the list of hall mile
,i,i,i
marks, repeated with a remarkable
1 minute 29 second time in the C60
yesterday.
The high men in Thursday's events
were :
Pole vault: Elkins, Theta Chi, 10'
9"; tie for second at 10' 6" between
Raue, Kappa Sigma, Connor, Kappa
Sigma, and Ossian, Delta Sigma
Lambda.
660 yard run: Snethen, Phi Delta
Theta, 1:29; Dexter, Theta Chi,
1:29.2; Wyatt, Kappa Sigma, 1:32.2.
The standing of teams now is:
Acacia, 10,939; Kappa Sigma, 10,
853; Theta Chi, 10,463; Sigma Nu,
10,448; Farm House, 9,621; Delta
Tau Delta, 8,568; Sigma Phi Epsilon,
8,376; Tau Kappa Epsilon, 7,789;
Alpha Tau Omega, 7,640; Phi Delta
Theta, 7,026; Lambda Chi Alpha,
6,746; Alpha Sigma Phi, 6,236; Delta
Sigma Phi, 5,491; Beta Theta Pi, 5,
478; Pi Kappa Alpha, 4,248; Phi
Sigma Kappa, 4,091; Phi Kappa Psi,
2,370; Phi Gamma Delta, 1,400; Del
ta Upsilon, 1,130; Delta Chi, 938;
Delta Sigma Lambda, 910; Alpha
Theta Chi, 870; Alpha Gamma Rho,
820; Omega Beta Pi, 820; Kappa Psi,
820; Xi Psi Phi, 800; Sigma Chi,
570; Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 544; Mu
Sigma, 100.
MISS TOWHE TALKS
BEFORE TEACHERS
Vocational Director of Lincoln
Give Addre at Open Meeting
Of Pi Lambda Theta
"Vocational Guidance" was the
subject of an address given by Miss
Harriet Towne, vocational director
of the Lincoln Schools, at an open
meeting of the Pi Lambda Theta
Thursday evening. This is a national
honorary educational organization,
but all junior and senior women reg
istered in the Teachers College were
invited to attend.
Miss Towne, who is an authority
on the subject of vocational guid
ance, illustrated hei talk by lantern
slides. The speaker is well known as
a national authority on this subject
which is of such vital importance in
the field of education. Elizabeth
Morgan presided over the meeting.
A slur I business session waj held
after the talk had boon given.
Splendid Specimens of Copper Ore
Some splendid specimens of covel
lite and bornite copper ores were
aent to the department of Geology
by Marcus Banghart '26 from the
Anocanda Copper Mining Co. of
Butte, Montana.
tories written by Miss Shan
out in the 125-pouna ciass
morning.
r this magazine.
skog frf Lincoln.