The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 01, 1931, Page TWO, Image 2

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    SUNDAY, MARCH 1. 1931.
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
The Daily Nebraskan
Sutton A, Llnceln. Nebraska
OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA
Publiehed Tueadav, Wedtteaday. Thursday, Friday and
Sunday mornings during the academic) year.
THIRTIETH YEAR
Enured as eecond-claee mattar at the postofflce in
Lincoln, Nebraska, under act of congress, March 3. tSTt,
and at special rate of postage provided for In eeetion
110S act of October S, 1917. authorized January 80. 122.
Under direction ef the Student Publication Board
SUBSCRIPTION RATE
nWf aiwltrpfiy VM n'ti1r
3 a year mailed 11.7 semester mailed
Editorial Office University Hall 4.
fcuainess Off Ice University Hsll 4A.
'"enes-OayTB-SMIj Nlghtt B-MS2. as-JMS (Journal)
Ask, for Nebrasnan editor.
COITORIAL STAFF
Clmont T. Walt i Idr;'VS!,,
Robert J. Kelly Aaaeclate Editor
Managing Editors
William McCaffln C. Arthur Mitchell
News Editor
rM"" Wb" BEu..n.?cK!m
Evelyn Simpson Eugene McKim
Leonard Conkll U.S2!?Z ld!!
Frances Holyok Women a Editor
BUSINESS STAFF
Charles 0.. Lawlor Business Manager
Assistant Business Managers,
Norman Galleher J Thompaon
...... Harold Kube
cawm rin'n"' -
MCMBe
TUl . 11 - 1 J
ltl
This
edrertisiBC
is iiiasiafd for
hr The Nebraska rress
Blame It
On the System.
Surprise!
We are shocked but delighted to hear thst
the Prom Oirl election was entirely fair and
square. Something new tnd hovel in such elec
tions, we, admit, but withal quite satisfactory
and pleasing to relate.
Student council is overseeing closely (or
as closely as that body can) the financial side
of the Prom, as well. This is also a surprise,
Not that there was any graft in previous years.
Of course not. But it is indeed pleasant reve.
tio to KP the rwuieil nit in aH take notice,
Thoir hearts are in the right place, at any rate.
Now if they can arrange to do something
further with their new constitution no, that
would be asking too much. Instead, we shall
ask if any information has been received to
date on the drill committee, or the union build
ing. It would indeed be a shame jf the latter
group reported in detail the impossibility of
such a building project, after the senior class
and Innocents had already built the thing.
"Dear Ed: Will you please read the enclosed
poem carefully, and return it with your criti
cism as soon as possible, as 1 have other irons
in the fire." A contributor.
Well, we have read your offering. Uc ad
vise removing the irons and inserting the pocin.
ED.
3Iiss A. Howell Recalls Humorous
Incidents Which Happen Backstage
During Past Player Presentations
Prom decorations seemed to be present, all
right. One thing still bothers us. Where was
the ceiline?
. . .. .t: :
"Wnfit is the matter wun uus uiuu-hm; .
demands A Senior, writing in the Morning
Mail eoltrain. From remarking on the slight
progress made in building projects, in campus
beautifieation, he goes on to ask the cause of
this slowness.
Hp has stated clearly and concisely the basic
1 rouble. Can the university be forced to edu
eate every high school senior in the state who
desires to enroll, while at the same time it is
granted onlv money enough to educate half the
number! Apparently, Mr. Senior, it can.
There is a law that permits the state legisla
ture to curtail university appropriations, or to
regulate them in any way it sees fit. On the
other hand, there is no law forbidding entrance
requirements, or more severe examinations, or
other wavs of decreasing enrollment. There is
no law, but there is custom custom, and pub
lic obligation.
The result: Often the university is forced
(by this obligation) to enroll an overlarge
number of students, while at the same time (by
i v ;.nAM KnTvrwvrt is cut in tWO. The
taw jia j.iunv w i' '
consequences: A great many students receive a
bit of an education, while the chance to really
educate a smaller number is denied the institu
tion. Thus the theory of mass education pre
vails in state-financed universities.
Whether it is a good or a bad theory is ques
tionable. Shall be give to the more intelligent
few a real education, and according give Ne
braska leaders such as she has never before
had? Or shall we give everyone who may be
argued into taking it, a slip-shod smattering of
knowledge! Is it better to provide brilliant
leaders, or fairly intelligent masses?
In a democracy, there can be only one an
swer. The masses must maintain a fairly high
intelligence quotient, for in theory they control
ihe government of the state. From this, the
obligation of the state university.
The only possible solution, then, as far as
the University of Nebraska is concerned, is to
iry and make the legislators realize this fact:
As long as the university is forced to educate
all comers, it will be far better to educate them
thoroughly, to give them an opportunity to
come into contact with real leaders in their re
spective academic fields.
Legislators are quick to r?lize a need which
is visible and apparent to the eye. Witness the
passage of the dormitory bill It carried solely
because one woman legislator had seen the in
terior of a few of the women's boarding and
rooming houses. She saw a situation that
should be corrected. She did her best to bring
about the remedy.
Thus our building program is the easiest of
our needed improvements to secure. Campus
beautifieation will be slower, because ihe ma
jority of the legislators e a few imposing
'new buildings on the campus, and do not see
ihe beautiful campus that the administration
car. forsee.. They cannot picture the completed
whoW A few new buildings, and evidently
nuiehrogress is being made on campus beau
lii'icaWon. This leaves out of the plan com
pletely the necessary work of combining these
units jo produce, eventually, the campus beau
liful. Failing to see it, legislators fail to real
ize tflfc need that exists.jSo it is that, para
doxically enough, each new building at the
same 'time brings nearer and pushes farther
aenynhc ultimate campus design.
Tn purely academic fields is the hardest
.it niggle for appropriations found. Here there
is nothing that is visible. Shall we spend good
money for one man. when we can obtain an
..iher'to teach the same course for.less money?
if course not not when it means increased
1;.xcs. (Which in its'f is a rather ridiculous
argument.)
Why should one instructor or pi-of -. r le
w orlh more to the university, by several thou
sand dollars a year, than another? When the
l.-uislfitor can be made to see the answer to this
queslion, Ihen will the University of Nebraska
t;:kc her rightful place among the leading uni
versities of the land.
It involves spending money, plenty of it, for
things that no one can actually see, or touch.
The extra value is invisible. Invisible things
are pretty poor motives for increasing appro
priations in most cases. In the financing of a
university, they arc all-important.
What is wrong with the university? Blame
it on the system. A state university, in a
democracy, can go no farther . . . until legisla
tors are mad to look at visible needs, and to
realize invisible necessities. This is bard to
bring about. It is blow work, but we believe
the administration could speed up a bit if they
would sit down for a moment some afternoon
and figure out just what they are after. Then
getting it might be a bit simpler aud easier.
Babbitt in Europe.
"Babbitt is a symbol of the average Ameri
can 100 per cent. His story is a manual for
the studv of a whole society. Mr. .Lewis snows
the vaeuitv, the triviality, the flatness of mid
die-class life in America. He puts to shame
the agitated sterility of dollar chasing." So
says Andre Levinson, writing for a Paris jour
nal.
That the picture of American Lfe presented
bv Babbitt and Elmer Gantry is unreal is ad
mitted freely in America. Y wonder if per
haps Europe seeks to discredit American life
because she owes us money ? America is a great
nation, financially. Europe, aceordinglj', tries
to make her appear poverty-stricken intellec
tually and spiritually.
Foiled: One plot to prevent arrival of any
of four Prom Girl candidates at the Prom.
Well, we hope it really was T. X. E. About
time they did something, or spilled around a
few skulls and crossbones. After all, we were
all children once.
MORNING MAIL
To L's, at Least, This h Humor!
TO THE EDITOR :
All students and especially journalistic stu
dents know that there is a code of ethics that
all good newspapers follow. Apparently there
is a lax knowledge of this code of ethics in our
campus newspaper. We refer to the recent in
terview with a certain university professor in
which words were put in his mouth which were
never uttered.
(He means the coloneL ED.)
It begins to look as if the student body voice
is being run by someone in higher authority
who desires to do all the possible dirt upon the
campus.
There has been a persistent rumor upon the
campus that the former editor of The Daily
Xebraskan was a tool in the hands of certain
individuals. A picture of personal publicity
which would lead to a good position when he
graduated from school was used as the bait.
"When all the time the main ideas was to ad
vance their own communistic ideas.
From all indication the same bait is being
used with the same results at the present time.
One does not pay much attention to one rumor
but when they come from all tides there must
be some truth behind the aseertions.
As long as investigations are in order per
haps a little investigation into the policy of
The students' voice would be well.
(He means us. ED.)
JOHN BEATTY.
Speak for yourself, John. Yon art wrong
about ns poor but well-meaning journalists.
ED
What's Wrong Here?
TO THE EDITOR :
What is the matter with this university? It
seems to me to be hopelessly left in the lurch
by other universities of the middle west. It
hhs no student spirit. It has no union build
ing, no swimming pooL It has no beautiful
campus, riot half enough utilitarian buildings
for classroom work. As a matter of fact, all
the progress it seems to be making is in the
line of erecting dog houses, and ticket booths
in front of the stadium.
Twelfth street could very easily be closed
if it was tone about in the right manner and
with sufficient energy. Then a second me
morial street, or mall, might be constructed
across the present drill field. It would not
take so very much money, and would be the
bijrgest single step that could be taken toward
making of this factory -site a real campus.
When 1 enrolled here as a freshman, the
campus presented much the same wne as it
does now, with one exception. The place now
occupied by the memorial parkway iu front of
the coliseum was even worse than the present
drill field. What an improvement a second
such parkway would be!
This one new addition is the only improve
ment in the appearance of the campus that I
have seen completed, or even begun, since I
entered the university. "What is holding the
school back? Is it only lack of money?
It occurs to me that the university is trying
to do too much with the funds they do have,
and as a result accomplishing little or nothing.
Must they allow every single Nebraska high
school graduate that so desires, enter the uni
versity? And must they keep every single one
here if they can? Why try and educate the
whole state's youth, with only enough money
to educate properly about one-half of the num
ber? Is there any law that permits the legislature
to curtail university' funds, and at the same
time forces the university to submit to an
ever increasing enrollment? If there is, it is
unfair. . A SENIOR.
By SEARS RIEPMA.
With the recent announcement
by the University Players of their
forthcoming presentation of Anna
Oora Mowatts sparkling- coraeay,
"Fashion," it mljrut be appropriate
to gfrt the ;tuicat boiy a picture
of this unique department of the
university. One phase in tne ex
perlence of the University Players,
less well known to outsiders, con
sists of the many different and
sometimes strange, things that
happen backstage.
With the exception of the play
er themselves and perhaps some
favored habituecs. It is not un
likely that few ever know or even
faintly Imagine the various epi
sodes happening backstage, that
mysterious place which witnesses
half the excitement commonly at
tributed to an actor's life. And
judging from the many and varied
narratives gleaned from the per
sonnel of the dramatic department.
the backstare of the Temple Ust
ater has seen as many comic or
tragic misplays as the best on
Broadway. While one at all Inti
mate with the department and the
players might surmise these stor
ies, yet ihe average person on me
campus rarely hears or mem.
Jury Bench Sinks.
One particular incident, still
well-remembered by those who
saw tt at the time, happened dur
ing a presentation of the play
Madame X" tn 1924. it was me
courtroom scene, and Madam was
being relentlessly examined be I ore
the jury. Just at this extremely
dramatic moment the entire bench
on which the "Jury" was seated
began slowly to sink, genUy de
positing the twelve tn a very un
dramatic sitting posture. The au
dience, naturally enough, had Its
laurh. but the unfortunates man
aged to preserve straight faces in
the midst of their calamity.
"We never really expect these
sometimes unfortunate incidents,
said Miss Howell .associate pro
fessor of dramatics and well
known by the university generally.
"We always try to maintain an
operating system wnicn win eiinr
inate as many accidents and un
necessary disturbances as possioie.
They do, however, happen every
once in a while, ana men we
simply try to carry on as well as
we can. Sometimes the situation
is rather tragic, but one can us
ually find something laughable in
it.
"One particularly amusing mis
chance happened when one of the
players, acting the part of Dog
berry in "Much Ado About Noth
ing," accidentally half-swallowed
his false whiskers, and was scarce
ly able to say his lines in conse
quence. I was prompting him at
the time, and. frightened not only
for the play but his life as well,
we hastily arranged for another
person to replace him. But be con
tinued trying to give his part, and
actually managed to succeed after
a fashion. We were really quite
upset, altbo his mother, in the au
dience, did not even know what
was happening on the stage.
Actor Loses Mustache.
"Another misfortune very simi
lar to this was when a player lost
half of his artificial mustache just
as he was entering the scene. He
immediately tried speaking with
the remaining half to the audience.
The plan worked, altho there was
some confusion as a result of the
necessary rearrangement of cues
resulting."
Miaz Howell said the most near
disastrous of these episodes hap
pen when, for some reason or
other, some actor fails to show up
in time for the performance. Then
all is confusion. Needless to say.
ostracism awaits the criminal
when found guilty.
"At one time," she continued, "a
girl slated for a part in the second
act of a play didn't appear in time
and we had to put another in who
happened to know the lines. After
subsequent investigation we found
the offender had gone off at a
dance. That was a rather extreme
case, however
"During a performance of 'Ro
meo and Juliet' we were using a
small boy In the part of Peter.
When the time came for Peter to
make his bow be was nowhere to
be found. At last we found him ly
ing asleep on a pile of cushions in
the basement. Yet another time,
when we were playing The Mas
querader,' jt was necessary to en
ploy a huge police dog. We finally
located one suitable for the pur
pose, hut, acting on his master's
suggestion, did not have him ac
tual!' on the stage until the first
night of the performance. You can
imagine how be looked as the cur
tain went up and be stared across
the glare of the footlights into the
darkness beyond. He reminded me
of the Hound of the Baskervilles.
He was so iarge we were all afraid
to be near him, and so 'acted
around' him as much as possible.
Later Mr. Jenks led him to the
dressing room and succeeded t
making friends with him."
Jenks in Double Role.
A Hart Jenks is well known to
friends of the Uiiirersity Players.
He had difficulty, when playing a
double role, in remembering which
to dress for. When in such a posi
tion it was his habit to ask,
"Which am I now?" Once he was
almoft on the stage when he dis
covered he had on the wrong cos
tume. The others made up lines for
him while he ran back and hastily
corected the mistake.
Not all these occurrences are
unintentional. Every once in a
while some member of the cast is
made a subject of a practical joke.
In "Sun Up" the person acting the
part of an old time southern
preacher was given a chew of to
bacco dipped in chocolate, in place
of the piece of genuine chocolate
he was supposed to use. He had
no misgivings and so fell an easy
victim. Again, the patient in Mo
Here's "Imaginary Invalid" was
uuCd ti.cu a levifta tioae) oi ceuilor
oil instead of the verified aqua
pura expected, and, being in the
middle of his part, was forced to
swallow it all without sign of
protest. Just what took place
after the act, however, is not re
corded. "These mistakes are always very
much out of the ordinary," Miss
Howell finished. "We generally
have a certain amount of harmony
In the organisation. They merely
form the actor's 'spice of life' in
his everyday work."
l'laya Villain
SKSWV' ii iwimiiMai
13 .
t
Mas. .
NTS
2s&j.
Courteiy of The Lincoln Journal.
W. ZOLLEY LERNER.
Of the University Players who
will play the part of the villain in
"Fashion," the next offering of the
University Players.
"Rock Chalk Pile" Symbolizes Kansas
Tradition As It Overlooks ML Oread
LAWRENCE, Kas. There
stands on the side of the highest
point of Mount Oread, overlooking
the stadium and pointing toward
Corbin hall, which is built on the
site of old North College ball, a
pile of rock, known as the "Rock
Chalk Pile." This "Pile" is a sym
bol of Kansas university tradition,
history and ideals, as a record of
fulfillment oy her famous sons.
At various times during the his
tory of the university, there have
broken out movements lor tne ad
vancement of K. U. loyalty, and
the establishment of traditions, re
suiting in commemorations of vari
ous sorts. The years following the
World war saw at Kansas a new
spirit and a renewed interest to
put "K. U. First" in a vast pro
gram of 'K. U. Loyalty." As a re
sult of this renewed interest in
K. U. spirit, a huge letter "K" was
built on the west slope of North
College HilL out of rocks secured
from the ruins of the first build
ing of the university which stood
upon this hill.
Cairn Replaces K.
However, when Corbin hall was
built a few years later, this letter
'K was destroyed Oy woricmen.
who were ignorant of the signifi
cance of :ts meaning. With the de
stroying of the "K" a feeling arose
that there was no permanent trib
ute to Kansas spirit exisiting on
the campus, such as existed on
other campuses. The idea of a
cairn a rock chalky pile on our
campus, built from Oread's native
"Rock Chaik" as the first buildings
were, came as a result of this feel
ing for a permanent expression of
Knsas spirit.
The building of cairns or piles of
commemorative stones as popular
rallying centers antedates all his
tory. According to the Bible, when
the Jews returned to Palestine
from their Egyptian bondage, they
bad to build such a cairn, the
meaning of whose stones they
were required to recount from gen
eration to genreation forever. Like
landmarks, cairns stand upon the
world's high places, from China's
mountain sacred to uonructus
westward back to California's ML
Roubidoux. So it wss that the or
iginators of the K. U. cairn,
thought of such a "Rock Chalk
Pile when deciding upon a monu
ment to K. U. spirit that should
serve as a popular rallying center
on the campus.
Idea Conceived in 1926.
The idea of the cairn was con
ceived under the influence of "K.
U. Spirit" that marked the coming
of Chancellor Strong, but it was
not a reality until the spring of
1926, when Sachem and the Men's
Student council with aid of Prof.
Frank E. Melvin of the history de
partment started the construction
of the "Rock Chalk Pile."
The reasons for tie "Pile" were
set forth in a letter writen to Arlo
Putnam, Chief Sachem, by Profes
sor Melvin. These were:
1. To visualize K. U. history and
emphasize our relation thereto.
2. To cultivate K. U. loyalty and
a real "school spirit."
3. To stimulate K. U. activity
and personal responsibility.
"The desire for the project be
came university-wide when inspi
ration came from the history and
biography of the 'older K. U. as
told by M. W. Sterling, the Scotts.
Morgan. White, Slosson. and other
alumni," says "The Rock Chalk
Pile," a pamphlet published by
Sachem. Stories of the vital influ
ence of the traditional symbols of
other schools were brought to the
campus. Harvard and its Harvard
Yard, the Yale Fence, the Oxford
Martyr monument, the giant old
boulder that lies in front of one
of the Illinois buildings, around
which, the Illinois student rally,
t! Missouri columns, California's
rock "C" on the side of a hill, and
stories of other monumental ral
lying places were brought to the
campus, with '-he result that there
was a desire for a traditional ral
lying place on the campus such as
was had at other schools.
Melvin Starts the Work.
The actual work on such a proj
ect came at the suggestion of Pro
fessor Melvin to members of Sa
chem during the last few days of
the first semester of the school
year of 1925-26, and the "Rock
Chalk Pile" became a reality that
spring.
By the middle of April the proj
ect was well under way, so a joint
meeting of Sachem the Student
council and the faculty to deter
mine the selection of events that
should be commemorated; the per
manent character of the pile; the
uses and methods of insuring the
fulfillment of the plan in the fu
ture. The result of the meeting was
to give Sachem full charge and
authority to do as it saw fit. The
site agreed upon was on the slope
above the Memorial stadium field.
The construction of the pile be
gan at once, the money being fur
nished for the work by the Men's
Student council, and the rocks
taken from the old North college
hall. A survey of the remaining
rocks of the old building was Ukea
and one was found which was sui
table for engraving. The inscrip
tion as it may now be seen is:
NORTH COLLEGE
(1S59)
1S66-1917.
The date I1S59) indicates the
date on which the comer stone of
what eventually became the first
building on the campus of the uni
versity was laid. The other two
dates are those of the first and
late years in which the building
was used for class room purposes.
Dedicated by Alumni.
The pile was formally dedicated
on May 7, 1926. by Dr. Frank
Strong. Merle Smith, Miss Han
nah Oliver, and George Leis, who
was the first student enrolled in
the university. Sachem initiation
was also held at this time and the
freshmen voluntarily appeared in
their caps.
A committee was appointed
which met before school was out
in the spring and agreed to obtain
a bronze tablet which was to be
added to the pile at the beginning
of school the next fall.
The following fall an upright
stoneshaft was erected and the
bronz tablet was mounted upon
it with the following inscription:
Rock Chalk Cairn
Dedicated
to the
Vision of the Founders
of
The University of Kansas
and
to Those
Who Helped Faithfully
Convuratioii Pros rani
Fine Arts Band. William T.
Quick, director.
Tuesday. March 3, 1931., at
11:00, at Temple theater.
Overture, "William Tell." by
Rossini.
Invitation a la Vale, von
Weber.
Swanee Smiles, Hager, Ring.
Favorite melodies by Victor
Herbert.
GRANT 89 TUITION
SCHOLARSHIPS FOR
SECOND SEMESTER
(Continued from Page l.i
this semester follow:
Agriculture: Either Atkinson, Butte:
Doldir Ultxon, Wanoo; Fred V. Orau, Bin
nlnKlnn: George VV. Harmon, Yutan; Marie
Hnmunf, Race: Htlrn Jeftryw, Ida Grrnc,
la.; O. Uarloit Mrhinl. (.rand laluid:
KrJ AltrldlUi. St. Edard: Clarence 8,
Runyan, IJncoln; Ethel ohitldt, Trenton,
Mo.
Art and cirn: Alfrvda Auten. North
Rend: Vmirt M. Chan, Honolulu, T. H.;
lxniK Cohen Omaha; Jame 1. Crablll,
Frd Cloud; William A. Crablll, Red Cloud;
William a Eddy. Maryivlll. Kaa.; Marvin
T. Kdmiaon. Lincoln: Grace Fowler, Val
entine, Dorothy E. Graham. Omaha; Joar
ihlne C. Orotvenor, Aurora; Marjorie K.
Ho, SynuiK-e: Harvey Humann, Lincoln;
linen U Johnaton. Council Bluff. la.:
William C. Kletttl, Jr., Lyona: Gerald John
Loetlcrle Lincoln; loula Henry Lukart.
Reward: Joaaph W. Miller, Jr.. Beatrice;
Helen O'Connrll, Kalrbury: Mary C. Pol
lard. Lincoln; Flhel Quimon. Lincoln:
Mariano Vlvil. Philippine Island; Ruin
lAiila Wnlft, Council Blufla. la.
Fine ana: Loulae M. Crlnklaer, Luak,
Wvo. : Donald Crow, South 8hux City;
Cornelia Fehner. Seward; Harold R. Fierce.
I ah an. la.: Johnny F. Sienvall. Nortn
riatte: Felix Summer, gtrahan, la.;
Kathrrtne Robert .wiiilama. nunlap, la.;
Elhrtdce Bnibaker, Olenrock, Wyo.
Journalism: F. I.aiirtc Hall, Lincoln:
Anna Margaret Pttereoa, Chapman; Ruth
H. S"hlll. Alliance.
Rutlneaa admintatration: Fred Bebert,
r-entaon. la.: Darrel Gilbert Hinkle, Salem;
Marvin C. Howarth, Cook: Keorca Kadele
cek. Dwlajit; Walter H. Keller. Lincoln:
J. Edward Kllfore, Lincoln; Roye a Kin-
Inter. Miltord; Christina MallK-k. Indian
ola; J. Miller Richer, Cotad: Cella St inc.
Lincoln; Alva Buford Trero. Holyok,
Colo.; F.veivn Wtitamuih, Lincoln: Br -nard
Zahol. Rock laland. 111.
Teachera college: Eva M. Calea, Napoo ee;
Gertrude DetenfeKler. Lincoln: Lillian C.
Depirr. Starling; Loulre M. Plera, Sheri
dan. Wyo.: Haicl Ma Fry. Byron: Nettie
Hower. Valentine; Alice B. Huber, Beatrice;
Re mice Jacotaun. Waierk; Keinhoit Kikle
berk. Hardy; Maltet Kollmorgen. Wcet
Point: Sadie Jan Lolhl. Cotad: Grace Mae
Owena, Ashland. Sarah Christina Pettraen,
H i Id ret h. Marjone stllrs. Clay Center;
Charles L Stout. Lincoln. Burnett Vauck,
Clav Center: Let Wemp. Frankfort,
Kaa.: Vivian Will, Areola; Adele WlndeU,
Syracuse.
Engineering: Laurence P. Aetrhliman,
Sabrtoa. Kas.; Jjchn I. Central. Palmer;
Carl A. Hagelln. Friend: Cyrus Hoekstra.
Wood River, T. N. Kumtt. Omaha: Donald
W. Loutxenrieiser Gothenburg; Charles C.
MrKamara. North Platte: L. W. Mabbott,
Wayne: Norbert Noonan, Loontis; Frank
W. Pollard. Lincoln; Laverne M. Ruth,
Cairo: Roger W. Sent. York.
Pharmacy: Constantta T. Dtagtkes. Lin.
coin: Roy William Hlnze. Lincoln
Stories by Faculty Men
Published in Magazine
"Some Arsonic Acides of Flor
ence and Its Derivatives" Is the
subject of an article by Prof. Cliff
S. Hamilton of the department of
chemistry and F. E. Cislak which
appears in tbe February issue of
the American Chemical Society
I
All Souls Unitarian Church J
SUBJECT MARCH 1
Avera Hansmod nf IndianaDClis J
"An Example of the Spirit of J
Brotherhood in Industry." 'J
1
LEARN TO DANCE
Can teach you to lead In one leeeon.
Guarantee to teach you tn em pri
vate lesaona. Classe every Monday
and Wedneaday. Private lea sons
mornlnp. afternoon and evening.
. Bill Room and Tap.
MRS. LUELLA WILLIAMS
Private Studio:
Phone B42M 1220 O STREET
''ctajTIrT""11' " '""Vl
!UNG BOOKS
Exceptional
VALUE and QUALITY
IIX8V2 3 Wing Only
$1.00
With Monroe Filler (1.00 Ream
Tucker-Shean
1123 "0" St.
BUCK'S
COFFEE SHOP
FOP. ME PLY DAVIE)
SPECIAL
STUDENT LUNCE
30c
Hot Rolls and Drink
Included
a
IT PAYS TO
PREPARE
A
TOW FEACTICAL WORK
Brief intensive courses that equip one to render needful and
profitable service are proving- every day that
BusineM Training: Will Pay Yon Well
. Ask About New Class March 9
Lincoln School of Commerce
Member Natl. Ass'n. of Accredited ComT. Schools
P & 14th B 6774 Lincoln, Nebr.
Do we like it?
In chorus we do!
And only
10
If y-Jcafig jH tlntn at
"We sun to kftji our selection
of Trucks crisp-looking and up-to-thf-ininute
in style details.
In oi'der to make way for new
spring assort ments, we have
taken 48 dresHf-s out of our
regular stock, and grouped
$10
sizes 14 to 18
flat crepe wool sportswear
chiffons formals
Magee's CoEd Campus
Shop
112r; R Street