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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1932)
...i, on vu rrT-rrvwinliinii.1 , ,n n , , , , -j p-r-r--' .mi 'i .'i i i -t t -- .-iiJlSMa. - " V FOUR THE DAILY NEBRASKAN THURSDAY. OCTOBER 13. 1932. HUSKERS SCORE ONLY TWICE ON YEARLING TEAM Sauer and Mathis Register Touchdowns Against Scrappy Frosh. USE MINNESOTA PLAYS FreShmen StOP VarSlly UH , 5-Yard Line; Bishop New Casualty. Two touchdowns were all that the varsity could muster against a hard fighting freshman eleven Wednesday afternoon when the Huskers received their first com petitive taste of the Minnesota offensive and defensive type of P'lJeorge Sauer's dandy 35-yard off tackle dash to cross the goal standing up came as the first score of the scrimmage, and then Morris Bristol, sophomore guard and tackle candidate from Ans lcy was rushed in to kick the try for point. Chris Mathis chalked up another touchdown after the first string re-entered the battle following a short rest. Running hard, Mathis swept off tackle and rut back to reach the goal line twenty yards away. Bristol missed the try for point. Shortly after the fray got under wav, Sauer clipped off the out standing offensive gem of the aft ernoon, when he cut off tackle behind a wall of interference to sprint 55 yards to the 20 yard line where Wilson, frosh back nailed him The nlav was called back, however, and the varsity penaiueu - i , i fifteen yards for holding. Stopped on 5-Yard Line. While the varsity registered consistent gains near midfield, they found it hard going when near the goalposts, the yearlings aided by Ed Weir stopping them once on the 5-yard line. Boswell made good yardage on several re verses, and Staab did well the short time he was in. ' Fahrnbruch, playing tailback for the second string backfield did some capable line smashing, but it was Sauer and Mathis who stood out. Especially dififcult for the white-shirted varsity men to solve was Jack Manders' spinner play that shoots inside tackle, and de monstrated effectively Wednesday by Johnny Williams. 180 pound freshman fullback. Williams found frequent holes good for four and five yards on the play. A screened pass just over the line also both ered the Biblemen, Antram heav ing some accurate passes to Wil liams and Wampler for short gains. Blocking of the first and second stringers showed great improve ment, Wednesday's scrimmage be ing characterized by far more snap and drive than has been on display any time this we;k. Bishop Injured. Steve Hokuf continued to rest cJocKS;; ness futile and MUCH Cash Carry 14th joe fuC 10c Per Line Minimum 2 Linei Karmelkorn Fort GENUINE Karmelkorn. bnt but leri popcorn, drlir lotix whipped Go to Johnson i. 1412 '4 O. Hair Cutting riERSON Pmonlfiei Pr'nl Krv Ire. Hslr Cuttlnic. 8Sc. Hr firrjon Jr. 1231 K tret. Lost and Found KOUND "EriKliAh Government n 4 Politlrn" hy Okk. Omnr timv i Umi by cllln at th Nhraki offine and paying for ttiln ad. KOL'ND Pair of mhit "m.)h KlovV7 fall at Nbrakn offl-. IjRT Alnha Iwlla Theta aornri) v nlic Call Milrired Miri Kil, FuL'KD Blark aatln aaah or inr k piera. Call at Keb:akan of fir. Board and Room STUDENTS BTP.aVfoRD Ho'VBB. 1VKJ P at. B-4H6S. P,oar. and room, cian r.Kifni and ilHiri.,,,, rm-nin. 1 1 KM or mor. OtrauMi available Rooms for Rent TWO lrahl lepln tomA f.,r roy ixira aludy room ry raa-cn-tMa r-'7 f. P V-'T Trip to Minncarpolis C'A" TAKE fnur aliiHrriia to Minnap o'ta for kiitw M rvh ci Al kaJKr, Jr. Ji-iS27 or B 497i. it Joe Miller j Scandinavian influence as re gards the Minnesota starting line up is much like the "Fighting Irish'' of Notre Dame. It is con spicuous by its absence. There are only three members of Coach Bierman's eleven that started against Purdue last week who ap pear to claim Swedish, Danish or Norwegian extraction. Oen, 170 pound center, Capt. Wally Hass, halfback, and Francis Lund, sopho more backfield star seem to com plete the Viking roster. Last year at Notre Dame there were very few Irish bovs on the first and second strings, with the regulars versity students, education, Mr. listing a backfield cpiartet of , Wells has this to say of those ships Melinkovitch, Jaskwich, Scmvsit tz ; pf learning, floating universities: and Shceketski. "When they're coed, they don't work. There were seven marriages Give Coach George Weaker of ()n the one I visited. Those tropi Iowa State credit for conjuring up ' cal moons are too romantic to be a smart move by which he hoped ! conducive to proper concentration, to outfox Nebraska last week. All j So if yon are really out for knowl last year Veenker used a seven j edge and the broadening expert man line and a diamond defense. orlce of travel, choose a floating Starting in again this full, the Husker scout saw that Veenker was sticking to the same style of defensive play. But when Ne braska went up against Ames last Saturday, they met an entirely dif ferent defensive system. The Iowans employed a six man line, plus three men forming a closeup secondary defense with two grid sters stationed farther hack. No wonder the Cornhuskers lookid sick. Their plays designed for one defense just couldn't work against another system. Veenker had tins up his sleeve for a long time, anu it almost worked. It's milk aad orange fed Corn huskers now. Every night in the dressing room following practice, varsitv players have the choice tu a Dint of milk or an orange. The idea, of course, is to send the grid- ! iuv a., wi . n i .ii., io iv j'- .- ri gterg home minus tne raVenous np- petites that usually accompany hard work and an empty stomach. his injured ankle, but M. J. "Doc" McLean, Nebraska trainer, says that the veteran end will be ready to go by game Saturday. A new casualty appeared in Clair Bishop, left guard, who incurred a rup tured nose cartilage in the Iowa State game. The injury has de veloped complications since the Cyclone tilt, so Bishop was held out of Wednesday's scrimmage, and may not be in the best of shape to start against the Gophers. Elmer Hubka, also a guard is about recovered from his knee in jury. Thursday's program calls for a tapering off drill, the varsity con fining their efforts to kicking, passing and running signals. They will go thru a warming up session Friday afternoon before leaving for Minneapolis. The team, ac companied by Coaches Bible, Browne and Schulte, Trainer "Doc" McLean and Senior Man ager Sickel will entrain over a Burlington special, leaving Lincoln at 7:00 p. m. and arriving in Min neapolis at 7 o'clock Saturday morning. ECONOMIC SECRETARY TALKS TO SOCIALISTS (Continued from Page 1.) administrations," he stated. "It is the only plan yet suggested that would enable the unemployed to' raise their own standard of living, without lowering that of others. "The plan does not propose to lessen the rights and liberties of the commodity-wage workers, but to attain greater liberty for them. , Men without jobs are already de- ; prived of all economic liberty save I the right to beg or accept charity. ! "It provides a place for all those ! laborers now thrust aside in mid-1 life by mechanized and efficient j processes while it aiso provides a ; place for those millions of surplus laborers now pouring out of the schools to swell the army of the idle," he added. i "Socialism is the 'left wing' of I Christianity," he pointed out. "So- ; eialism is the act of projecting Christ's kingdom into the realm of industry." Dr. John A. Ryan gave the commodity-wage plan its initial public ; hearing when he lead it recently before the National Conference of Catholic Charities meeting at Omaha. TWO NEBRASKA GEOLO GISTS RELATE THEIR EX PERIENCES IN SEARCH ING FOR RADIUM THEY FAILED TO FIND (Continued from Page l.i vented the area being opened for rapid development. The rivers ure full of rapids, making transporta tion k. umli'r almost impossible. " " - . . . . . I The danger or neing wrecKco on the rugged rocks and defeated in the beginning c! r;V j prospectors to resort , o lam n getting around the .r-amuH ranirla All Of wmcn COnsllLUlC a part of numerous hardships neces sary to overcome. Hewitt went further to say they spent three weeks going ad (stance not greater than 275 miles by boat. Lovald and Hewitt spirit three days at Echo Bay. the last trce of civilization, before pushing off into the hills in quest, for radium in virgin territory. The population Included almost every' type, ac cording to Hewitt. "Then- w re college lin, inexperienced !:ke ourselves, but there were many more men who wen vet'-rans of the Yukon and other gold rushes. One prospector. Bill Johnson, rushed. io the Yukon in 1 Pete Lauder, sixty years old and broke aft'r P!11"?: in almost every gold field on the continent, was h.p. for another trv. There we" going tn we passed a party v.-i h a woman In It," continued H-witt. Settlement Cabin, and TenU. "The settlement of Va ho Hay consisted of two cabins and about, thirty ti scattereri around in no. rsftilar order along thi shore. : There was a general store wni h ' no one patronized because cf er. horbitant prices. Flour sold for 0 a hundred pounds, two pounus of lard for $4.40, (3.60 for five pound of dried Carveth Wells, Famous Lecturer, Started on Adventures as World Explorer as Surveyor in Canada Ciirvolli Wells, I'ii iticil 1nivcloj:iio radio speaker niul African explorer ami his wife, ihvc a Daily N'elnjislain scribe a special interview in the midst of their autographing of .Mr, Wells' hooks thrust into his hands hy many admiring readers. The two arc touring the United States for the purpose of gathering material for this winler's radio lalks on spots of interest and heautv iu America. O ' They arrived in Lincoln via air plane at 10 o'clock on' Wednesday morning, Oct. 12. On Columbus Day. the anniversary of the discov ery of America by the most fa mous explorer of his time, one of the outstanding explorers of mod ern times discovered Lincoln, Neb. Against Co-Ed Schools. Combining his own field of in- terest, travel, with that of the uni- university that is unscxiial. Of course, if you merely WHiit a good j time, that is another matter. Graduated from London. "1 started my adventures as an , explorer at the age of twenty-one j w hen I graduated as a civil engi- i neer from London university. Sent f to Canada as a surveyor. I soon , found that in America the engine- ! (iri'-er makes more money than the engineer. However, by good luck, ; I went to Malay by order of the government and spent six years there. It was from the personal experiences of my work there that i I gleaned the material for my book "Six Yeats in the Malay Jungle." I made thiee thousand talks on that subject before I wrote the book." Judged to be physically unfit for action on the battlefield at the be- . . sinning of the World war, and pro- hibited from re-entering Knglanrt if not in service. Mr. Wells took occasion to make his first visit to the United Stales. He obtained a job as a laborer in a shipping yard, but had to give this up after a month when he hint his hand Chancine into a lecture nan wnere j a man "4 s speaking on the Ameri- can robin. Mr. Wells got into an argumenl with the lecturer, taking . the stand that there are no robins ; in America. "The robin, ne says. ; "u-a nofi bv the Pi -rims in a : riiristmns ceremony, and when i they found no robins m the At- Cincinnati University President Says Depression Starts Cultural Education CINCINNATI, i TP i. T ri good' , times, whon big b.is.nt ;,s went , t about seeking technicians and : ; complained that colleges and uni- ; ; versities turned out too lev.' of i them, technical courses became : i the "rage" in the institutions oi , 1 higher learning throughout the : land. Professors of English. Plwoso- phy and the other arts who pre- j sumcd to complain were laughed down. They had nothing more tc do but act as voices crying in the wilderness. Now, thinks Dr. Raymond Wal ters, former dean of Fwatlhmore College, this year b ginning his lirst term ns (.resident of the Uni versity of Cincinnrti. depression will start colleges w;nin teaching students how to occupy their idle time, of which they will have plenty in the next lew years. "The first function i.( a uni- Supreme Court Judge Tells Students . About European T rip Last Summer Judge lVinc of l.lie Nebraska supreme cotnt. in a talk at the Phi Alpha Ici:i house Thursday evening, to'd lights of )n of interesting high Kuiopcan trip this past summer. ; The judge went by way of Can ada and stopped in Winnipeg, where he sat on a court as a spe cial judge. In his talk lie com mented (,n the speeilmess with I w Inch trials are conducted and :cr!leM!is passed in the criminal courts of Canada. Inspects English Inns of Law. ! From Canada, .Justice Pai:. continued to Knglaud where be visited the Inns ol Law. These n, , htitiitions com ' pond to our Arnei 1 is very little jury challenging in i ican law college. They are line. 1 dormitories wnere the veleiau lawyers live, eat, and dunk v.ilb ! the students. Alter a certain pem,d 'III H.iS.OI III, Otl With tile VltrJM,-. the young rui n are d'.c dared i oii.pe lent fo begin piactice and are ad mitted to the bar. The judge 'I'- . I......I II. ..I I,,.. n li:,i,,i.,l ,. 1k,u !'" " manner are inleHor in naming in fruit? Mcals "consisting of lake." Hewitt doilared, "because planes and boats were arriving at that time regularly and the r ton-keeper was boycott"'!, as soon a. supplier could lie obtained from the out did"," add"'! the adventurer So Impressed are l..ivold and Hewitt, that ih'-y int'-nd to make another expedition to dent Hear lake next year, if f.-inddions per mit. I-Joth are cxpeneru ! geolo gists, and to their xpericnceil eves, the evnlen'es of vast, tin- . touched mineral wealth that they i found m t only in the immediate viunity of Great Rear lake, but hundreds of mil'-s around, was con vincing proof that there is an em pire waiting only for men to con quer and develop. A i rested on fharg'-s of forging athletic fee cards, v.hiih assi-rledly were to be exi hanged for football tickf-ls. Iviward I. Saufi r of the I n,i.i.t-uit , ..I V'tu. -.t u.n ll.iu , i.i.li (j;.ni(.(J J(.. , lan d he ol,ta.ne, th" ranis from a gtran.er, who wi-h'-d to have exihangerj for tickets to th Mrrpn-tte-Winconsn football game. 'I wouldn t lake a chance like that and nun my whole ;fe If I'd known there was anything wrong with the cards," Saufer sai't lantic coast promptly gave that name to a member of the thrush family. The lecturer sarcastically invited me to finish the lecture in his stead, and I've been at it ever since." Wife Well Known. Mrs. Wells, known professionally as Jetta Robart, is well received in all business circles as well as Parisian society centers. She is the business manager for Lowell Thomas, Sir Hubert Wilkins, Roy Chapman Andrews, and Count von Luckner. She has booked Martin Johnson for several engagements, and her services are being sought by Kloyd Gibbons. Her business acumen is not worn on her sloeeve, however, for she is an attractive blond with a charming personality. Both Carveth Wells and his wife are young appearing, clever, and full of enthusiasm. They have only recently returned from a month's expedition in Russia, sponsored by the Chicago Geographical society. They took a trip into the Cau casian mountains, going one-third of the way by rail, another third by auto, and the remainder on horseback. Tribes Barbaric. "The wild tribes which inhabit this region," comments Jetta Robart. "are in an. almost unbe lievable stage of barbarism. The climatic conditions are of the worst, their clothing is scanty, and they live in a perpetually unbathed condition. One tribe, which claims to be descended from the Crusad ers, actually wears the chain mail armour and helmets, and carries i shields bearing the insigna of the i cross, that were the fashion during the davs of pilgrimage. j Mrs. Wells is writing a book j tovei the conditions in Russia today as she saw them. It will con- j rem" the failure of communism i unl its various phases, divorce, i .. . . inrlnclfv arwl cn ' niai i la' r""'' "', , " ., i forth. She has been her husbands , manager since she first me h.m. Me claims which took k place about four years ; , V.h coiiimi.vuiii wiu.u Mr W ells uave a lecture at bl. Paul's church' Wednesday evening. ""!! Lm li'mrf bih". oau- Hon is training for the leisure ot i life. "Perhaps the greatest problem day and in the next quarter of .-. century is that of enforced lei sure and unemployment. "Our economic system is on trial, just as every preceding sys tem was on trial. Its promems cannot he solved with a Pollyanna recipe that all things will work out well if simply given time. I would suggest for this problem o enforced idleness a definite pro gram of intellectual work. "Rending should be rcganled as a game, and writing can be done if one feels like it. Many persons are fuming to writing, and one authentic sign of a nation's It com ing int-llectual is a luxuriant crop of nn'ateiir writers." the nun turned out hy oui law col 'hp - . Jll-tiee Kriyland. Paine stated that there Instead of having to go thni two or three panels to make i up a ury as in America, all the jui - i;. generally chosen from the In -I panel. Justice Visits Dickens' Court. An especially interesting high-!r-ht of the trip was the visit he l-ai'l to the court conduct'-d f,y Kerry Dickens, son of Charles I n I'.'-ns who brought al-out many "nut reforms in Kiigland thru his novel. In Italy. Judge palm- was piiv ilegi d to sit on one of Mu-i ini's ) ud courts. The jud'.e stated t.'at under Mus.viliiii '.- new code thei- are twenty enmes whicn merit capital puru-hrni-nt A Kim the judge could not umli i -land all that was said at th- trial, he le c ived the gl;:t of it thru an inter preter. While sitting on the court he saw three political offenders sentenced to terms on a penal is land from which, he was told, very few rni-n come back alive. issTia nous i iu;i: mm i n i:ihce (,vr m tin Tiwlu'is Dvnirv Tli'it Stiulrnls Sec I uri-'mn Shine. The in.it riK toiH in the German department aie uiging their stu dents to attend the picture at the State theater either Friday or Sat urday. The nhow 'Congress iJani-es" will lie in German dia logue those two nights. This picture will be the first German film to be shown in Lin ; coin for a long time, anil if it Is hijccf.s.sf ul, other films with for eign dialogue will be shown here, according to the manager of the theater. Students of Herbert Hoover's; Alin.i Miter this week weie com-1 pitting th" organization of a group ' to assist I he president actively in ! his campaign for re-election. Th" . group is known as the "Hoover-1 foi -'resident Club." 1 "Three types of men go to col I lege, those who are willing to be ' educated, those who want to be educ ated, and those who are de- terminer! to be educated," said Newton T). Baker In a recent ar 4 tide written for the Ptloceloniun. Net Phi Kappa Psi advanced' to the quarter-final round of the inter fraternity tennis c h a mpionship Tuesday afternoon with a 3 to 0 win over Delta Upsilon. Drawing a bye in the first round, the Phi Psi netmcn join the Sigma Chi team as the first to enter the third round of the competition. In the feature match between Phi Kappa Psi and Delta Upsilon, Byron Clark, Phi Psi outclassed Henry Kosman in a three set en counter, the set scores being 6-1, 5-7, 6-4. Henrion won from Chris- tensen by default while Joyce made me iriumpn complete oy aeieaiins Hero Myers, b-a, -. Delta Tau Delta served notice that it will be heard from in Inter rounds with Hugo Dean handing Nicoll of Tau Kappa Epsilon a ti-0, 6-0 whitewash and Eason nosing mit fnntp nf thf anmo fraternity. I 8-6, 5-7. 8-6. Delta Sigma Lambda : had its hands full to beat Pi Kappa I Alpha. Scott trimmed Loomis, l-B. j 6-4, 6-4, Void eased out a narrow ; 4-u 7-5, 7-5 victory over Smith and Owen vanquished Skade by the ssme count. Oniy the Delta Chi-Phi Kappa match remains on the first round, CHIfliUrti , ftilU Lflc IWO I trams expected to meet Thursday for de cision. Seqond round pairings bring to- e0, nor the fast Alnha Theta Chi outfit and Kaona Sitrma: Lelta Sigma Phi plays Alpha Tail! Omega; Delta Tau Delta meets Pi! Kappa Phi: Sigma Alpha Epsilon j engages Phi Sigma Kappa and ' Delta Sigma Lambda goes up I against Phi Delta Theta. IOWA STATE COLLEGE Chief Arranges for Shipment Of Farm Products From Eastern Part. ; AMES. Ia. Agricultural scraps I from many parts of eastern United States will soon be finding their way here to be analyzed, plans now under way at Iowa State college indicate. Dr. P. Burke Jacobs, chief i of the Ames Field station for ! study of utilization of agricultural i wastes of the United States De- !'" "' "' " ii ini'i"cni.B duels lor researcn nere. At St. Louis he will negotiate for leather scraps, at New Orleans for rice hulls, at Birmingham for cot ton seed hulls, at Louisville for to bacco stems, and in Georgia and Florida for pecan shells. At Mem phis, Tcnn.. Baton Rouge. La., Bat tiesburg, Miss., Lake City, Fla., and Detroit, Mich , he will inspect plants which are engaged in re search and distillation of waste products of the same general type as at Ames. The Oregon State Daily Baro- j meter, long an outstanding college newspaper in the northwest, has been forced for the present to drop the "Daily" from its name, and un der and order of the college's board of control, accept a tri-weekly pub lication schedule, it was made known this week. Financial diffi culties forced temporary suspen sion of publication of daily edi tions. According to the Institute of Family Relations, the college cam pus is rapidly replacing the church societies as a popular mating- ground. One of every six marriages end in divorce; one in seventy-five sown in college crash. Arizona Wildcat. Defeat Delta Upsilon Trio in Intramural Tourney Play. Beginning Thursday A Very Special Selling of CREPE TURBANS '1 : b- "" Amsden Jlillincry I rx v z.rr j: Reverend Inglis Says College Students Inclined to Question Philosophy Advice "Today the current philosophy is the 'oh yeah?" type. College stu dents now question things," said Reverned Irvine Inglis of the Vine Congregational church of Lincoln, when he spoke at Vespers Tuesday evening on the subject of "The In tellectual Requirements of Ade quate Philosophy of Life." In the past there was a philos ophy of an entirely different sort on codege campuses, Reverend Inglis explained. It stressed altru ism, service, and democracy, but this was distorted into war, and we i went out to kill in the name of service and humanity. According to Dr. Inglis, students should form their own philosophy of life. They should not blindly take the philosophy of others as their own, but should try to form their own ideas through thought and observation. Otherwise they will be in the same predicament as : tho person wno has "swallowed i hia reigion. It will soon be lost j aflpr coming to scnool. , ... ,. . Shou,d Face Facts- Kegaruiess ot personal proju j dices with which they have grown fl E pQUr SophOmOrCS Are Fart Time Workers in Department. AMES, la. Four Iowa State college students have attained the goal of every true American boy-- to be a fireman and are earning i their way thru college in doing it. j The four men, all sophomores, are part time members of the crew of the new quadruple fire truck I just installed in the station built into the west stand of the college stadium. They are Carl Kruempel of Arlington, Rex Nelson of Dun lap, William Schwartz, of Afton and Darwin Soder of Hartford. The students, in return for hold ing themselves available to hop the truck and hold a hose when the fire whistle blows, receive living quarters in connection with the fire station. There they do their own cooking and housekeeping. "Our menus haven't been elab- i orate so far," Soder exclaimed the 1 other day. "We just eat whatever ! we hannen to have hanrtv Rut we I are plotting to persuade one of the full time firemen employed by the city to cook for ,-.s and to wash dishes." The new fire station was in stalled during the summer follow ing the fire which destroyed the college cattle barn last fall. It gives j the Fourth ward of Ames, the col- lege community which lies almost two miles from the center of town, its first localized fire protection. The city and the college are co operating in support of the sta- i tion. Will Rogers this week became a college man in a women s coi- i For Your (Regardless We will allow $1.00 for your point, toward the purchase of F AC INC and FUR FELTS Tlie trickiest little turliaiis. unl the wickedest vilcl l.lai k. brown find navy . Head sizes '2V- to - I. And specinl i-inelinse eiuiits our $1.00 t rr rz rvr? 1 I Vfca IN I A f.. y I LJgT'tMjttt? agar mimi up, the student should attempt to face all facts in a straight-forward manner, stated Dr. Inglis. He said that people today are guided in life, to a large extent, by the bill boards The billboard which has he picture of the prettiest girl on it sells the most of its advertised products. People do a thing not because they think it is the best r.,t'.nRut0 fl but siml'y because it s .being done this year." Tuie opinion decides the majority, not personal thought. finally, your philosophy should rinrl Ihn )i.,f 1- - stand the tent of time, both present! and luture," said Dr. Ineli in r,.n. elusion. "We should attempt cer tain fundamental discoveries and proofs, and phases of life with which we have adequately experi mented. Consider the future. We will be living day after tomorrow. Choose your philosophy of life so that you will find satisfaction in it fifty years from now." The vesper meeting was led bv Catherine Williams, and the vesper choir presented two numbers. Miss Williams is vice president and chairman of the interracial com- j mittee of the Y. W. C A. AT THE STUDIO Fdllor'M nni: Annminrrmpnln of Cnrn Innkor plrturp ( llrflllli d for tho week will be run under thin head hrrniftrr. Thursday. Scabbard and Blade at 5 o'clock. Friday. Tassels at 12 o'clock. lege! Seniors of Wellesley college announced that the famous humor ist, now en route to South Amer ica on a horse-buying expedition, had been nelccted as this year's honorary classmate, in keeping with an annual tradition. He will be invited to deliver the principal address at the graduating class supper in June. George Arliss, the actor, was last year's honorary classmate. Almost 45 percent of the 873 freshmen who answered a question naire at Hunter college are under the normal college entrance age. Of these five are only 14 years old and eighty-four are 15. New York Times. WE CLEAN HATS Men's Felt . . 75c Ladies' Felt 50c Caps 25c Soukup & Westover Call F2377 for Service I lf, Old Pen of Make) old pen, as long as it has a any new pen in our stock. V 9 l(T& CAMPUS 79 the pnvest little 1. lining 1 -liiiiie,iux iiuiigiualil''. ''' ' t the colors vou iu i tmly n most rxt ritorn.o... . sc-llinsr tln-iu Jit ll:is l-'"(',? 1 4