The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 26, 1933, Image 1

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Neb
HIP
RASKA
Official Student Newspaper of the University of Nebraska
Lincoln, Nebraska, Tuesday, septembkr 26, 193:1.
PRICE 5 CENTS.
T7IT-YYllf-NO. 10.
I f I J. .
A.W.S. ANNOUNCE
WOMEN STUDENTS
Executive Board to Enforce
Code of Regulations
For Coeds.
FEW CHANGES EFFEr 0
National Panhellenic Uraer
prohibits Smoking in
Girls' Houses.
A w S. rules for this year,
.r.Wh,touSi
houses for girls as well as to pri
vate homes where women students
s?e living. These regulations will
Rre 1."a v... th pxprutive board
of associated women students, ac
cording to an innouiiwiumw if
le(!rs! ier 'not radically dif
ferent from those of last year.
Sorority houses ana uurauonra
re oren to men callers until 12:30
" ir-ij-v nri Saturday niehts.
until 10:30 on Sunday nights, and
between 5 ana v:o on wee
nights. ,
xt fmhrnan mav leave the
house on week nights after 8 p. m.
and sophomores may nave oniy
ioht ene-aeement. Uni
versity women may not be re
ceived in men s lodging or irmei
nity houses unless a chaperon is
present. .... ,.
A national panhellenic ruling
prohibits smoking on the premises
of any woman's dormitory or sor
ority house. Chaperonage for
women students must be provided
at all times during university va
cations. Women delinquent in any sub
ject forfeit the right to week night
engagements, although house com
mittees may inflict other penalties
if they so desire. In no case may
these rules be made more lenient
by house committees although they
niav be made more stringent."
The complete list of rules is as
follows:
1. The residence of men and
women in the same lodging house
is not approved and is not per
mitted unless the circumstances
aie unusual. In this case permis
sion must be granted by the dean
of women.
2 I'nivpraitv women shall not
be recefved in men's lodging or'
fraternity houses unless a house
mother or a chaperon is present
and receives them.
3. A rooming house for women
students shall be provided with a
reception room for student use.
which is properly lighted and
warmed. All entrance ways shall
be well lighted until 10:30 o'clock
(Continued on Page 4.)
10 START NEXT WEEK
Course Is Being Given for
Benefit of Hard of
Hearing Persons.
Path week by the Nebraska league
nara or neanng in room
105, former Museum building, on
ne university campus, according
tO an annntlnremanf tyioi4a vAttai.
--... u.U4 I U.Ll
day.
the schedule Is as follows: Mon
day, 3:30 p. m., under the direc-
"i mrs. w, ej. BarKiey, con
versation class for deaf mutes.
Wednesday. 7:30 p. m., general
Practice class. Thursday, 7:30
P.. m- general practice class.
Thursday, 7:30 p. m., first year
students. Second year students at
p. m., Mrs. V. E, Barkley,
So. 24th st.
People who are contemplating
taking a course in lip reading .ire
"quested to register at once. The
correspondence course in lip read
mS will begin immediately.
I
S GOVERNING
RULE
Emma Parks Wilson Hall Will Honor
First Dean of Women on This Campus
Named in honor of the first
acan of women at the University
t -Nebraska, Emma Parks Wilson,
jhe second women's co-operative
ome at ieio R street is now in
use by University women. The
name was approved by the univer
ity board of regents at their last
meeting. The first unit in th uni-
co-operative home plan at
""0 R street was put into use last
in!!- 11 was named Howard hall
" honor of Mrs. C. E. Howard,
'"st woman graduate of the uni
versity. irg. Wilson, for whom the hall
named
UVe in the lifA nf h ..r.i.,oraiV
a was well known in Lincoln.
one of the early gradu-
hw b l he institution, receiving
VM-fr: degree in 188- Eighteen
cars Iataw loitn . . .
jars later. 1898, she received her
"aster's detr v,.
two
wo years 1898 to 1900i shc served
EnSi i '0fflen and lecturer in
cSS? he died ta Lincoln on
JudL2 1927- Her husband,
and h. L Wllon. and her sons
in Lw l are a11 well-known
is ...ne 8on- RalPh Wilson.
th ate Prfessor of law at
l"r , Ver81ty- Another son. Wal
rln .11' 18 & wel1 known Lin
wfo5Tta A AM-- Hc,en
cola hiiv lcacr of art in Un
a "cLool, mm another
Cleaned and Polished Campus Sundial
Will Record Time For Another Year
Professor Collins . Believes
in Powers of Scrubbing
and Renovation.
Cleaned, polished and ready to
tell time for another year.
Such is the condition of the cam
pus sundial, located between the li
brary and the administration build
ing: According to Prof. O. C. Col
lins, who accomplished the feat, it
Is remarkable what a little scrub
bing and renovating will do.
The timepiece, given to the uni
versity by the class of 1907, has
been practically illegible for the
last few years. Professor Collins,
inspired by righteous zeal, spent
an hour or two cleaning the stone
and redrawing the lines, until now
it is clearly readable.
It stands about waist high and
is about two feet in diameter. On
the surface are inscribed Roman
numerals and a diagram showing
the deviation of the sun from the
correct time. In the latter part of
October and the first of November
the dial records about sixteen sec
onds slow. At no time is it more
than 14 minutes fast.
Formerly it was a common prac
tice for each graduating class to
present some gift to the university
at the time of graduation. Accord
ing to Dr .R. J. Pool, chairman of
the botany department and gradu
ate in 1907, several other gifts
were suggested that year but this
was the one which was chosen. A
subscription was taken to pay for
the sundial, which was made in
Lincoln of Georgian marble.
S. D. Swezey, former head of the
astronomy depaitment, located the
dial and placed it in the correct
position for the sun rays to strike
it. His successor. Prof. O. C. Col
lins, now is keeping it in condition.
L
S
Dorothy Charleson to Head
Honory Dance Group
This Year.
A junior Orchesis group will V e
formed this year for all university
girls who are interested in dancing,
according to plans made at the
first meeting of Orchesis, honorary
dance organization. The members
of Orchesis will present a dance
demonstration on Nov. 1 primarily
Jor-the girls .who wish to try out
for the organization so they may
see the type of dancing studied.
The junior Orchesis, formed for
all university girls desiring in
struction in dancing, will meet
every Wednesday evening from
7:15 'to 7:45, beginning Nov. 8.
Tryout for membership in senior
Orchesis will be held in Januaty
at which time the junior members
will be eligible to try out.
Miss Dorothy Charleson, gradu
ate student, who is a former mem
ber of Orchesis, will head the
group this year. Miss Charleson,
who received her degree in Physi
cal Education, has studied dancing
with Doris Humphrey and Charles
Weidman at their New York
Studios.
Orchesis, the honorary dance
group for university women, spon
sors the university dance activi
ties, including an annual dance re
cital presented in the spring. The
club is considering work on an
original dance drama for this year.
MRS. CLARK GIVES TALK
'Consumers Participation'
Topic Discussed at
Staff Meet.
Is
Mrs. Clarence Clark spoke on
Monday at 4 p. m. to the new so
cial order staff, on the NRA. Her
topic was "Consumers' Participa
tion." Members of the staff will parti
cipate in a city wide campaign,
put on by the chamber of com
merce, to secure the participation
of all Lincoln citizens. Any stu
dent wishing to take part in these
activities may call the V. W. C. A.
office or Elizabeth Rowan who is
chairman of the staff.
daughter, Blossom, resides in Cali
fornia. From the outside Wilson hall is
a three story frame house, painted
white. Inside are large low ceiling
rooms, soft chairs, a radio clock,
and a fireplace.
Though it may be called a hall,
it neither looks nor feels like one.
It is really a home where this
winter sixteen University of Ne
braska women will live in an ef
fort to balance rising prices
against lowered incomes. Because
Howard hall, the first co-operative
venture, was such a success, this
second has been started, under the
supervision of Miss Amanda
Heppner, present dean of women,
and Miss Elsie Ford Piper, in
charge of housing.
In operating plans, the chief dif
ference in the two houses is that
Wilson hall will admit freshman
women, while Howard has been
open to sophomores, juniors and
seniors only. Except for the cook
ing the women take care of all the
housework, dividing it into shifts
for groups of three or four. This
is done, the residents explained, so
that a group would only have to
wash dishes one-fourth of the
time. Since the halls are required
chiefly to class work and athletics.
Classes in the mornings were
(Continued on f sga 2.).
AG WOMEN INVITED TO TEA
Home Economics Association
Sponsors Year's First
Entertainment.
Home economics students will
be entertained at a tea given by
the home economics association
Tuesday from 3:30 until 5:30 nt
the home economics parlors, ac
cording to a report received today.
Helen Schmra is president of the
Home Economics association,
sponsor of the tea.
"We are anxious to have all the
new girls on the campus attend
out tea Tuesday," said Miss
Schmra. "The tea is for all home
economics students, but we want
to extend a special invitation to
the new girls." There will be a
short program.
PUBLIC IRKS POLICY
Declares Faculty Engineers
Not Representatives of
Corporations.
OFFER OF INFORMATION
That. members of the university
engineering faculty are at the dis
posal of the public works board,
but not as representatives of pri
vate power and irrigation projects
was the explanation of Chancellor
E. A. Burnett in regard to the em
ployment of university faeully
msmbers by private corporations.
In a letter to Mr. L. T. Bonner,
president of an irrigation and
power project at Imperial, who re
quested the services of Prof. C. E.
Mickey, the chancellor declared
that it would be impossible to loan
the services of the instructor.
"I regret that it is impossible
for us to comply with your re
quest," wrote Chancellor Burnett.
"Professor Mickey is now active in
his university duties and could not
spare the time for this purpose.
Furthermore the university could
not appoint a member of its fac
ulty to act as an engineer in any
private project."
Suggesting that some private
engineer be appointed for the proj
ect Chancellor Burnett added, "If
your engineer or any other engi
neer came to Lincoln and any
member of our engineering, staff
had data that would assist him,
such information might be fur
nished provided it did not inter
fere with his miversity duties."
FIRSTWfOlWl'
WEEK TOOT OCT. 2
Instruction to be Given by
Members of University
Swimming Team.
A "Learn to Swim Week ' will
be sponsored by the intramural
athletic department under the di
rection of Harold Petz, intramural
athletic director, and Kenneth
Sutherland, swiming coach.
"Beginning this next Monday,
Oct 2, all persons interested in
learning to swim should consult
the free swimming schedule which
is posted in the entrance of the
coliseum," Petz announced.
Men's and women's free hours
are arranged and during these
hours there will be swimming in
structors present at all times in
the pool. In order to accommo
date all applicant members of last
year's swimming team will also
be present to aid in instruction.
This will enable almost every
novice to have a private tutor.
More registrations are also de
sired for the regular swimming
classes, according to a statement
k SntherlHnd. "There are
open places in both morning ana
afternoon classes," he stated.
MISS POWELL JOLS
SOCIOLOGY FACULTY
IS' etc Instructor to Have
Charge of Technical
Training Work.
As a graduate student and as
sistant for the past year in the
school of social service administra
tion of the University of Chicago
Esther Hale Powell, who joined
the faculty as instructor in the de
partment of sociology this fall
comes to the university highly
recommended.
Miss Powell's work here will
consist of teaching the more tech
nical courses in the training course
for social work and of having
charge of the local field activities
of the senior case work majors. A
native New Yorker, she received
her A. B. degree at Cornell uni
versity in 1922 and has had profes
sional training in the schools of
social work of New York and of
Simmons college in Boston.
GiRLS MUST GET BUTTONS
President of Mortar Board
Urges Women to Secure
Class Symbols.
An urgent request was made
yesterday by Willa Norris, presi
dent of Mortar Board, women s
senior honorary society, for fresh
men women to get their red and
white buttons.
Buttons may be obtained at
Radge A Guenzel'. ...
NEBRASKAN WILL
CARRY
NEW
ROTO
SECTION ON OCT. 1
Rotogravure Section Will
Appear Regularly in
Sunday Paper.
CALLED COLLEGE DIGEST
Group of Pictures Published
Each Week by Associated
Collegiate Press.
Tho first nnnparnneo of the
Dftilv Nebraskan's newest featuni.
a regular weekly rotogravure sec
tion, will appear In the Oct. 1 edi
tion of the publication, according
to a statement released yesterday
by Bernard Jennings, busings
manager of the Nebraskan.
The rotogravure section, which
is circulated once a week to a lim
ite.H numhrr of university newspa
pers throughout the country, will
appear once a weeK in me ne
braskan, probably with each Sun
Hnu isano nf the naner. Jennings
stated. The section will contain
pictures of outstanding events and
students in colleges and universi
ties all over the country.
The section, the title of which is
"Collegiate Digest," is published
at Madison, Wis., by the Associat
ed Collegiate Press of the National
Scholastic Press association. The
circulation of the section will
amount to about one hundred thou
sand copies a week.
Approximately one hundred col
lege and university dailies will use
the section every week, according
to information received from the
publishers of the Digest. There is
also a long list of student news
papers waiting to secure the Di
gest to issue to their subscribers.
CALL CHEER LEADERS
FOR FIRST TRYOUTS
Nine Students Filing Will
Meet Tuesday to Get
Instructions.
Nine applications for the va
cant cheer leading positions were
received by Otto Kotouc and Bob
Pilling, arid the nine men filing
will meet Tuesday at 5 o'clock for
their first instruction. Ed Fisher,
who is in charge of training the
prospective yell kings, plans to
hold classes every day until the
final tryouts in the coliseum next
week.
The applications received by
Pilling and Kotouc, Innocents in
charge of the selection of cheer
leaders, were from Robert Davis,
Omaha, sophomore; Norman
Finke, Kearney, junior: Beverly
Finkle, Lincoln, junior; Bill Fisher,
Falls City, junior; Owen Johnson,
Stromsburg, junior; Emmett Mo
rava, Omaha, junior; Ben Rim
merman, Omaha, sophomore, and
Merrill Whitman, Superior, sopho
more. From the ranks of last year's
yell kings only one man is return
ing, that one being Ed Fisher,
Falls City, who is in charge of
training the newcomers. Jack
Minor, Lincoln, was expected back
in school, but did not return.
Five of the nine applicants will
be selected to serve as cheer lead
ers during the coming football
season, the total number on the
staff being six.
"Tryouts for the positions will
be held in the coliseum," stated
Kotouc. "The five new members
will be prepared for the opening
game with Texas, on Saturday,
Oct. 7."
AC EXECUTIVE BOARD
ELECTS FILLEY HEAD
Valentine Klotz and William
Ralston Hold Over From
Last Year.
At its initial meeting of the
year, the Ag executive board, stu
dent administrative body on the
Ag college campus, elected fts
new officers. Vernon Filley was
chosen president from the student
body at large, according to the re
port. Florence Buxman and Howard
White, new secretary and vice
president respectively, were both
chosen from the university student
council. William Donahue, secre
tary of Ag club, received the high
vote for treasurer. Valentine Klotz
and William Ralston reside on the
board as hold-over members from
last year. Other members of the
new board are Norma Peterson
and Helen Schmra, president and
secretary of the home economics
club, and Ag club's president John
Loewenstein.
According to Filley, the presi
dent is elected from the students
at large. The other students be
come members of the executive
board by virtue of positions they
hold as heads of other campus
clubs, and the specific position
they hold on the executive board
is determined at the election.
The first action of the new ex
ecutive board, Filley said, was to
call for all campus organizations
to schedule their mixer dates
Lnroingtlyt w
GHEM ENGINEERS TO ELECT
Officers of Organization Will
Be Elected at Smoker
Wednesday Night.
The Chemical Engineers will
hold a smoker this Wednesday,
Sept. 27. at 7:30 p. m. at the
Grand Hotel. Professor Frank
furter, Dean Ferguson, and Dr.
Hamilton will give short talks, ac
cording to E. C. Elliott in charge
of the meeting. Election of offi
cers for the coming school year
will be held.
Freshman and upperdassmcn
Chemical Engineers are urged to
attend this smoker. Plans for the
coming year will be discussed. En
tertainment and refreshments are
being planned.
SECOfAMDENT
PARTY IS SATURDAY
Jungbluth's Band Secured
To Furnish Music at
Student Dance.
COMMITTEES ARE PICKED
Arrangements have been com
pleted for the second all-university
party of the season which is to be
held this next Saturday night in
the Coliseum at 8:30 o'clock.
Eddie Jungbluth's orchestra of
twelve pieces has been booked to
play for the affair, and to furnish
entertainment between numbers
and during intermission. During
this past summer this Lincoln
band has been playing at River
side in Estes Park, and broadcast
ing over the NBC system through
station KOA at Denver. Previous
to this year this orchestra played
for vacationists at Troutdale-in-the-Pines
near Denver, during the
summer.
At the Barb Council meeting
last Wednesday afternoon commit
tees to be in charge of arrange
ments for the parties during the
rest of the year were appointed
by the chairman.
Named on the orchestra com
mittee were Wilbur Erickson,
chairman; Marshall Cook, Helen
Still, and Howard Roberts.
Chairman of the chaperon com
mittee is Margaret Medlar. Other
persons serving in the group are
Bonnie Spanggaard and Lois
Turner.
Vernon Filley was chosen to
head the group "in charge of deco
rations, with Edmund Anderson,
James Marvin, and Marjorie Filley
as the other appointees. -
The chairman of the publicity
committee is Harry West with
Vernon Filley, Irwin Ryan, and
Evelyn Diamond named as the
other members.
These committees are to make
arrangements for the remaining
parties which are scheduled for
Oct. 28, Dec. 9, Feb. 17, March 10,
and March 31.
NEBRASKA SCHEDULES
Federal Control of Radio
System Will Be Topic
for Discussion.
Arrangements have been com
pleted with Kansas State college
for two debates on Oct. 27 on the
question, Resolved that the federal
government should enact legisla
tion providing for the federal con
trol of radio similar to the system
in Great Britain.
Nebraska will take the affirma
tive side of the question in the
debate at 3 p. m. before the debate
section of the Nebraska State
Teachers association. In a radio
debate over a local station the
same afternoon another Nebraska
team will uphold the negative side.
The teams for the debates have
not been picked as yet but will be
chosen about the tenth of Octo
ber, according to Prof. H. A.
White, debate coach.
MARIA STAMP IS AMES
XEW CHOIR MEMBERS
Accompanist and- 19 Girls
Announced by Leader
Yesterday.
New Vesper Choir members as
announced yesterday by its leader,
Marian Stamp are: Irene Barry,
Irma Beiberstein, Dorothy Boch
ner, Frances Brune, Leone Buck
ley, Dorothy Chapelow, Ruth
Hageman, Irene Hansen, Dorothy
Hood, Betty Knox, Esther Kreu
scher, Mary Ellen Long, Annie
Laurie McCall, Jeanne Palmer,
June Ridgell, Elizabeth Rubendall,
Ida Schreppel, Violet Vaughn and
Mildred Williams. The new accom
panist is Elizabeth Horrigan.
All old members are urged to
continue in the choir rehearsal,
Monday at 5 p. m.
WAA SALES POSITIONS OPEN
Candy Salesmen Admitted
Free to Games and Best
To Receive Prizes.
Maxine Packwood, concessions
manager for W. A. A., announced
Monday that there were several
positions as candy salesmen at the
home football games still open.
Anyone interested in seUlng should
call B6238 and ask for Maxine
Packwood.
Besides the free tickets to the
games, a prize is given to the
salesman selling the most candy at
the end or ine season.
The money earned by the con
cessions is turned over to the
W A A. treasury.
NEBRASKAN FIRST
DAY SALES GOOD
Cumpiis Daily' Annual Subscription (.ampaipt Claris
To Continue Tin ouliout Kntire Wrrk,
Iliixiness .'Manager Announvrs.
STATION BOOTHS IN SOCIAL SCIENCE, AC HALL
Special Block Offer (ids Half of Organized Houses
On Puhlicution's Circulation List With
Week's Drive
Hicliard Moritz Leaves
For Convention Today
Richard Moritz, director of the
department of Educational Serv
ice and Summer Session, will leave
today for Syracuse, N. Y. to at
tend the convention of the Amer
ican Association of Summer School
directors.
He stated that he will be gone
for three weeks and plans to spend
some time in Chicago visiting at
the world's fair.
TASSELS END TICKET
DRIVE MONDAY NIGHT
29 Members of Pep Club
Win Free Trip to Out
Of Town Game.
LAURA M'ALLISTER HIGH
University Players ticket drive
conducted by the Tassels ended
last night with sales records com
parable to those made last year by
the organization.
Twenty-nine Tassels earned a
trip to some out of town game by
selling twenty or more tickets.
Members to take the trip are Flor
ence Buxman, Arlene Bors, Gwen
Thompson, Anne Bunting, Roma
De Brown, Frances Rymers, Emily
Spanggard, Polly Pollard, Ruby
Schwembly, Margaret Medlar,
Phyllis Si'dner, Louise Hossack,
Laura McAllister. Alira Barkis.
Doris Herrickson. Mary Edith
Hendericks, Virgene McBride. Lois
Nelson, Marjorie Smith. Maxine
Packwood, Frances Brune, Jean
Brownlee. Marjorie Filley, Irene
Maurer, Irene Nabity, Mary Reim
ers, Gretchen Schrag, Thelma
Sterkel and Adela Tombrink.
Five Captains In Charge.
The entire campaign was con
ducted under the supervision of
five captains who were appointed
by Anne Bunting, president of
the organization. Overseeing the
sales drive was Thelma Sterkel,
campaign manager. On checking
the final sales records. Thelma
Sterkel announces that Laura Mc
Allister's team leads with Maxine
Packwood and her group a very
close second. Valentine Klotz is
listed as third with Ruby Schwem
bly fourth. Florence Buxman and
her team were fifth.
Laura McAllister, captain of the
winning group, led the entire or
ganization In the drive by selling
sixty-four tickets. Thelma Sterkel
was' second and Gretchen Schrag,
third.
The Tassels have conducted this
campaign during the past week
for University Players in order
that they might have the price of
tickets to some out of state foot
ball game.
The tickets sold entitled the
purchaser to reservations for six
University Players products which
will be given during the coming
season starting Oct. 9 when "The
Late Christopher Bean" starring
Ray Ramsey, alumni secretary, in
the leading role will be given at
the Temple theater under the di
rection of Miss H. Alice Howell.
Other plays will be presented on
Nov. 13 to 18, Dec. 11 to 16, Feb.
5 to 10. Feb. 26 to March 3 and
April 2 to 7. The staff of the Uni
versity Players is busy now select
ing popular plays for future dates.
Aq Student Studies
"On Pay" and Sails Boat Un Lanes
While On Danforth Fellowship Trip
trip to St. I-ouis, Mo., two
weeks there going to school "on
pay," another trip to a recreation
and study camp on the shore of
Lake Michigan, and a trip to the
Chicago "Century of Progress."
such was the summer vacation of
John Loewenstein, ag college jun
ior who last spring was awarded
the Danforth Foundation Fellow
ship. Danforth, retired president of
the Ralston-Purnia mills at St.
Louis annually awards a fellowship
to one student in each of the col
leges of the United States. The
fellowship includes the trip to St.
Louis and two weeks study there
in the Purina mills and on their
experimental farm about thirty
miles from that city, and the two
weeks outing at Camp Miniwanca
near Shelby, Mich.
The fellowship includes all ex
pences during the stay at St. Louis
and they stay in the Michigan
camp. It also included a trip to the
world's fair, but the student was
required to get himself to St Louis
and home from Michigan.
"The happiest and at once the
strangest thing about the whole
trip." said Lowenstein," was that
I made the entire 3,000 mile trip
witnoui a single iiai ure.
Loewenstein believes that bis
Vet Young.
Sales of subscriptions to Daily
Ncbrankan on the first day of
the annual campaign were un
usually good, Bernard Jennings,
business manager of the publica
tion, declared late yesterday after
noon. The campaign started yes
terday morning and will continue
thru the week until Saturday aft
ernoon. The actual count of the number
of subscriptions sold could not b;
taken because of the various places
at which subscriptions were sold,
the business manager stated. Reg
ular booths were maintained in the
first floor hall of Social Science
building and in the finance office
in Agrcultural hall on the agrcul
tural college campus. In addition
a great number of students came
to the office of the publication to
buy subscriptions.
Will Maintain Booths.
Distribution of copies of the
Daily Nebraskan every day thru
the bookstores near the campus
will be discontinued this year, Jen
nings announced. Copies will be
available to subscribers only at the
regular distribution booths. The:
booths will be located in Social
Science and Ag hall.
Intensive efforts to secure block
subscriptions from every organized
house on the campus will be made
during the drive this week, mem
bers of the business staff of the
Nebraskan stated. More than half
of the houses have already taken
out block subscriptions, . and the
rest are expected to subscribe be
fore the campaign is completed.
Rate Is Low.
The price for individual sub
scriptions to the Daily Nebraskan
is $1.50, the lowest price of any
large college daily paper in the
country, Jennings stated. Mail
subscriptions cost $2.50, and blocks
of twenty-five, which most of the
houses are taking, sell for $37.50.
The low subscription charge this
year is made possible thru a con
siderable increase in advertising
revenue for the year, according tc
the business manager. Thy actual
cost to the subscriber is less than
one cent an issue.
VESPERS TO FEATURE
El
Reports on Trip to Estcs
Assembly Will Keynote
Meeting Tuesday.
A report on "Estes Vespers'' will
be given at a meeting of Vespers,
today, according to Miss Martha
Hershey. who will preside at the
meeting.
Approximately forty men arid
women students from the Ne
braska campus attended the con
ference at Estes. June 7 to 17.
There were twenty women dele
gates and as time will not permit
them all to speak, there will be re
ports from the following: Breti
Peterson. Margaret Medlar, Ro
berta Coffee. Gwen Thompson and
Ruth Armstrong.
The theme of the conference whs
"Purposeful Living in An Age cf
Confusion." This will aUo be the
theme of Vespers. Estcs hymns
will be used.
The conference staff raises
monev to help with espenses of th-1
delegates to Estes. The candy sales
have started at the organised
houses this week.
Milling Business
experiences while in the Danforth
foundation trin were worth fully
as much as a semester, or even a
year, in college. "Of course one nas
no way of putting a numerical
such as that." he
said, "but we saw many sights and
met many interesting ana miiuen-
tial men."
There were thirty In the party,
all juniors from agricultural col
leges. At St. Louis they spent sev-i-n
rinvs in the Purina mills study
ing all the processes of manufac
turing ana mercanaising. iney
were taken thru the mill to see all
th, rlpnnrtmpnts in action and then
officials of each o f the departments
gave enem special insiruuuoii iu
classes. "We had classes every day
during the session" Loewenstein
said. "It seemed strange to be get
ting paid every day for going to
school."
From St. Louis the party split
up, part of them going to the fair
at Chicago before they went to
camp, and part of them going to
the camp first. The two weeks at
Camp Mimiwance were devoted
(Continued on Page 4.)
eve HAD it