The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 28, 1933, Page TWO, Image 2

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    TWO
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 28. 1933
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1h ( Daily Nebraskan
Station A, Lincoln, Nebratka
OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA
Entered as seeond-clati nmtter at the postoffice
Lincoln, Nebraska, under act of conareaa. March 3. 187a
and at special rate of postaage provided for In section
1103. act of October 3, 1917. authorized January 20, 1922.
THIRTY. THIRD YEAR
Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and
Sunday mornings during the academic year.
SUBSCRIPTION RATE
SI. 50 a year Single Copy 5 cents 1.00 a semestei
$2.50 a year mailed $1.50 a semester mailed
Under direction of the Student Publication Board.
Editorial Office University Hall 4.
Business Office University Hall 4A.
Telephones Day: B-6891: Nighti B-68S2. B-3333 (Journal)
Ask for Nebraskan editor.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Laurence Hall
Managing Editors
News Editors
Bruce Nicoll
Burton Marvin
BUSINESS STAFF
Bernard
Jennings
Assistant Business Managers
George Holyoke Dick Schmidt
V. ilbur Erickson
The NRA in
A New Aspect.
QA.TCH words and wise cracks, publicity and
prognostication about the NRA sweep daily in
such floods over all obstacles that it is only at the
risk of having an audience vanish that anyone un
dertakes to discuss the innumerable aspects of the
stabilization program. For that reason, and be
cause the Nebraskan does not believe itself or
anyone else in the position to vaporize about ulti
mate results in the social order, editorial comment
in this newspaper has bec-n avoided.
Comment has been avoided, that is, until now,
when an aspect that seems to have been completely
neglected presents itslf very forcefully, partially as
a result of a statement by Dean Roswell McCrea
of the Columbia school of business, concerning
Whose NRA views the Nebraskan carried a story
in its Wednesday issue. Said Dean McCrea, an
swering the argument that colleges are "glutting
the employment market far in excess of present or
future needs:"
"To educate to better understanding of vexing
problems and of opportunities for service, and to
raise the plane of competition among workers from
lower to higher levels is surely a gain rather than
a detriment to the social weal.
"None the less, there is a grain of truth in the
contention (that colleges turn out too many job
seekers), and in recognition of this truth, it be
hooves us to strive perennially for better selection
of student material, for more effective vocational
guidance, and for better focussed efforts at place
ments of graduates in particular jobs."
JT behooves colleges to strive perennially for "bet
ter selection of student material, for more ef
fective vocational guidance, and for better focussed
efforts at placements of graduates in particular
jobs," Dean McCrea declares. All three of these
significant points, it will be noticed, are concerned
with the development of a professional spirit and
the operation of professional devices within the col
leges. And to the Nebraskan's way of thinking no
better possibilities for carrying out the aims
stressed by the Columbia dean can be found any
where than in the professional organizations that
already exist.
Obviously "professional organizations" covers
a wide variety of activities, so for the purposes of
discussion the meaning will be limited to the type
of organization which falls under the less broad
classification "professional fraternities." Under
this arrangement the Nebraskan will be afforded
an opportunity to air some of its favorite views
about the values of professional fraternities, and,
too, the discussion is less likely to flounder com
pletely in theoretical paths, for such organizations
do exist and are rather familiar.
Professional fraternities, then, are believed to
hold the key to realization of the dean's three ob
jectives, but to see how, each of the aims must be
inspected more closely.
J7IRST, the part professional fraternities may play
in "better selection of student material," is
limited, because ultimately this responsibility rests
with college administrators empowered to adjust en
trance requirements. Professional groups can help
to raise standards within the colleges themselves,
however, by a variety of ways both scolastic, and
otherwise and the Nebraskan believes that they
have been of assistance in this respect, but have
by no means achieved perfection.
Second, the need for "more effective vocational
guidance," is part and parcel of every professional
fraternity's program, or at least it should be. The
professional fraternity, indeed, can probably ac
complish more in this respect than can be expected
from more formal attempts at any sort of voca
tional guidance, which have always manifested a
tendency to get out of direct touch with student in
terests, and hence fail of satisfactory results.
"Vocational guidance," after all, resolves itself
OFFICIAL
BULLETIN
AO student ari-anlutlone or faeulir
group desiring I" publlan nutlcr of
mfrllnn ur allM-r Inform elon lot
members mjt hut htm printed by
calling in Onlly rtbrakaa office
Swimming Club.
Women's swimming club will
meet Thursday, Sept. 28 at 5
o'clock in the W. A. A. room at
Ellen Smith hall. Maxine Pack
wood announces that it is to be an
important business meeting.
Awgwan Worker.
The Awgwan is in need of ex
perienced contributors for the art
and editorial departments. All
students interested in doing mis
work should apply at the Awgwan
office in the ba:;cment of U hail.
Rosalie Lamme, editor.
Lambda Gamma.
Lambda Gamma, Lutheran girls
sorority, invites all Lutheran girls
to a reception to be held Sunday,
Oct. 1 from 3 to 5 p. m. at Ellen
Smith hall.
Scabbard
There will be
and Blade.
a meeting of the
Scabbard and Blade Thursday,
Sept. 2H. at 5 p. m. in Nebraska
ball.
Rifle Team.
Men interehted in varsity and
freshman rifle teams will meet in
the basement of Andrews ball at
6 p. m. Monday, Oct. 2.
Commercial Cub.
The Girls Commercial club will
meet Tuesday. Oct. 3, at 7 p. m., in
Ellen Smith ball.
some of which
As tor the
In
"better focussed
in particular
to do much to
. Editor. In-chic.
go much for
Violet Cross
Business Manaaer
UNAFFILIATED MEN
ORGANIZE COUNCIL
FOR GROUP ACTION
(Continued from Page 1.)
plans call for extensive organizing
this season.
Last winter the interclub bas
ketball tournament and schedule
proved eminently successful, and a
baseball league was functioning
nicely when the school year ended.
Extensive work is to be done along
these lineg this year as soon as the
council is formed.
According to the constitution
the Barb council is a committee of
the interclub council, and has as
its function the forming of a me
dium of social life for the barb
students. This organization is In
charge of the All-University par
ties, the second of which is to be
held this Saturday night in the
coliseum. The first dame was two
weeks ago. Sept. 16. Besides the
next All University affair five
more have been arranged for by
this committee, the last two to be
held in the Student Activities
building at Ag college, and the
other three scheduled for the coli
seum. Harry West, president of the in
terclub council for the coming
year, said Wednesday: "I feel that
the Barb Students have a big year
ahead of them, and that the Inter
club council will enjoy a great
deal of success."
UNIVERSITY WILL
AID COMMUNITY
CHEST CAMPAIGN,
(Continued from Page l.t i
Six teams are included in ths '
regiment j
Team No 210 is under the Ji- j
rectlon of Air. C. O. Swayzee who
will act as captain. This organiza-!
into dissemination of information about a given
profession or vocation, and professional fraternities
are in a psitlon to operate here in a vivid and in
teresting fashion by a great number of activities-
are being carried on already.
third need listed by Dean McCrea
efforts at placements of graduates
jobs," we find again that professional
fraternities could expand their activities to be of
great service in this respect. At least one national
professional fraternity already has invaded this
field successfully, and even it has made little more
than a beginning. Combined with better organized
placement bureaus within colleges and their de
partments, professional fraternities ought to be able
aid graduates find actual jobs.
the actual points and their relation
to professional fraternities. Specific sugges
tions for carrying out these objectives are almost
impossible owing to the variability of conditions
among various colleges, but it can be pointed out
that contacts with high school students, semi-social
functions on the campus and off, and a great num
ber of other devices have been used in the past for
the promotion of professional spirit.
And it is the promotion of that spirit which
must be sought, in any case, for all the activities
which spring from professional fraternities are ul
timately seen to rest on this foundation.
"Professional spirit" adjustment of individ
uals to their places within a particular vocation is,
in the last analysis, the thing around which efforts
to train college students to a place in modern so
ciety must revolve. Inculcation of codes of pro
fessional ethics, abandonment of the selfish "rugged
individualism," all remain to be developed under a
movement for professional spirit.
In the light of the connection between the
NRA and the development of professional spirit
in education, the capital letters might be reinter
preted. Why can't it be professional spirit and the
National Restriction of Avarice?
Equality for
All Drivers.
gHORT and to the point is the communication
from a student who has evidently fallen into
the net of parking regulation enforcement. He
says: "Since we have a faculty parking area in
which student cars are tagged for parking, why
not tag faculty cars for parking in the student
parking places? It seems to me that turn-about is
fair play. (signed) One-of-the-Tagged."
And in this fashion the Tagged One brings
back into the limelight a perennial concern. Dating
from the days before the building of the malls,
when parking space was really a major problem,
the question has sung more or less in the air for a
long time. Rare, indeed, is the semester that
passes without some attention to car-parking and
as a matter of fact the above note from an ag
grieved student marks the second time the matter
has ben called to our attention, even this early.
A faculty member was the first complainant,
and his voice was raised against the slovenly way
in which cars were parked all over the campus, but
especially, he pointed out, in the space reserved for
faculty cars. It was both unnecessary and irksome,
he declared, to find a parked car taking two spaces
when places themselves were at a premium.
THILE the two complaints are directed at dif
ferent phases of the car-parking problem, yet
they have this in common: both involve faculty as
well as student parking, and both, by implication
at least, plead for greater attention to the way
faculty members park their cars. Boiled down and
fused, the pleas amount to this faculty members
who drive cars should be subject to at least the
same amount of supervision as is given student
drivers.
That there is some justification for such a
request is evidenced by the two communications de
scribed above, and if you ask a student driver he
will aver, perhaps profanely, that most faculty
members who drive cars handle their machines in
a way much below the standard set by students.
There would seem, then, to be justice in the
request that student and faculty drivers be treated
equally. Certainly both have the same dangerous
potentialities for both operate powerful machines
that only too easily may be devastating. And the
claim that faculty members need supervision, too,
seems sound, if for no other reason than that many
professorial drivers lack the youthful alertness that
often saves the younger driver from mishap.
In any case, automobiles continue to piesent
"social problem" aspects, no matter what people
drive them. Complex expressions of transporta
tion needs tho they are, automobiles still involve
the variable and human fa tors and these are not
limited to any class of drivers.
If there is to be any udequate supervision of
campus drivem, regulations should certainly be en
forced with a.s great an eniphHHis for faculty mem
bers as they ate for students.
lion will have charge of the Col
lege of Arts and X ienees and the
College of Biwineh Administra
tion Mr. M C. Koch has been
chosen captain of Team No. 211.
and he will have charge of Teach
ers College, College of Dentistry,
College of Phaimacy, and the Col
lege of Law.
The College of Engineering,
Conservation and Survey, and Ihe
University Extension department
will be taken care of by Team No.
212 under the direction of Mr. J. 1'.
Colbert. Mr. L. E. Gunderxon will
act as captain of Team 213 and
will have charge of General Ad
ministration. School of Music,
General Accounts, which includes
the Library, Legislative Reference
bureau. Military Science, Physical
Education, and Athletics, and
Commercial Activities, which In
cludes Bookstores and the Wom
en s Dormitories.
Mr. H. J. Gramlich will act as
captain of Team 214. and will take
charge of Agricultural Extension
department, Ag Experimental sta-
tlon. College of Agriculture. and
the State Department of Vocati'in-
al Education. The final team. No.
215. will be under the supervision
of Mr. R. B. Scott. The Service de
partment. City campus, and the
Agricultural campus comprise this
team.
Room for Rent
To a Girl
Reasonable Amount
726 Elm wood Tel. F7876
CONTEMPORARY
COMMENT
Business vs.
Professors.
Professors are all right in. the
university, business thinks. In the
classroom before the rostrum, the
little meek-eyed, forgetful Ph.D is
innocuous. When he speaks of
ionization, amoebae, Cartesian
philosophy, or marginal utility, the
professor wins approval from the
money makers.
But when the professor becomes
audacious enough to involve him
self in politics he is marked im
mediately as dangerous. If he
speaks in sociological terms about
improving conditions he is brand
ed as a red. The harmless little
fellow who lectured at women s
clubs and luncheons suddenly
grows to terrible stature. His eyes
glare with an awful light.
Business leaders, shuddering at
the sight of college professors on
the president's cabinet, revealed
their instinctive fear of the aca
demic mind. Editorials were writ
ten ridiculing the mathematical
Ezekiel Mordecal who can predict
the price of hogs by using calculus,
v hat makes the professor dan
gerous when he leaps over the
academic fence? Why does his
mumbling raise no concern when
it is done in a classroom? Because
professors have ideas; they are
thinkers. And thinkers when given
political power naturally try to
transform these ideas into reality.
But American business is afraid
of these academic ideas. It pre
fers that the political power be
bested in non-thinkers. It feels
perfectly safe when congress and
not President Roosevelt's academic
'brain trust" directs the affairs of
our government.
Daily Northwestern.
A Contagious Malady
And Its Remedy.
Symptoms of the dreaded mal
ady Xerbus Uanthovepekis have
already made their appearance
and school has just begun!
In case you don t know or have
forgotten what X. Uanthovepekis
is, we'll explain. This contagious
disorder which seizes its victims
almost entirely from the upper
classmen is a brain ailment. The
chief manifestations are that the
victim's brain suddenly grows un
til his hat becomes too small for
comfortable wearing.
The reason that few freshmen
are affected, strange as it may ap
pear, is that their brains don't get
a chance to develop because of the
presence of those affected by X.
Uanthovepekis. The latter tend to
retard the development of the
"bug" in the brains of their neigh
bors by continually impressing up
on them their (neighbor's) unim
portance. This immunity usually lasts
throughout the freshman year, un
less the man is initiated into a
fraternity or receives some other
distinction. Then he has his first
ordeal of the malady.
The immunity further disap
pears as the man enters his second
year, and in mild cases, the victim
suffers only for brief intervals
throughout the remainder of his
college career. In the more severe
cases, the victim may never re
cover as long as he is in school.
Is there a remedy, you ask?
Authorities recommend a well
directed kick from a No. 14 shoe
applied at the spot where most
kicks are applied.
Iowa State Student
TASSELS BREAK LAST
YEAR SALES RECORD
(Continued from Page 1.)
Pollard, Ruby Schwembly, Mar
garet Medlar, Phyllis Sidner, Lou
ise Hossock, Laura McAllister,
Alaire Berkes, Doris Erickson,
Kathryn Evans, Mary Edith Hend
ericks. V'irgene McBride, Lois Nel
son, Marjorie Smith, Maxine Pack
wood, Frances Brune, Jean Brown
lee, Marjorie Filley, Irene Maurer,
Irene Nabity, Mary Reimers,
Gretchen Schragg and Adela Tom
brink. Three of these saleswomen,
Louise Hossock, Alaire Barkes and
Polly Pollard, are candidates for
membership into Tassels. Twenty
sewn members of the organization
will nut be allowed to take the
trip beause they failed to hell
twenty tickets or more during the
drive.
Tickets for the University Play
ers theatrical season including six
plays may still be obtained by call
ing the office of the Players at the
Temple building. The first play.
"The Late Christopher Bean,"
starring Ray Ramsey, will be
given Oct. i) under Miss If. Alice
Howell's direction.
GIRLS ATTEND TEA,
DISCUSS ACTIVITIES
(Continued from Page 1 i
Athletic association, the A. W. S.
board, the V. W. C. A., the Big
Sisters board, the! Daily Nebras
kan. the Cornhusker, and the Aw
gwan. The honorary sororities
will have a room, and the relig
ious organizations will have an
other. The Tassels will show the
freshmen girls around to the
roonm of the campus activities.
Decorations are in charge of the
W. A. A. and posters are being
made by the Y. W. C. A. The A.
W. S. is providing for the refresh
ments which will be served by
the members of Alpha Lambda
Delta.
This tea is a comparatively new
feature in girl's activities, being
instituted to give freshmen the op
portunity of acquainting them
selves with university women's ac
tivities. At the tea girls will be
given the chance to select and jo'
the particular organization whu-.
has attracted them.
Oil-O-Plne Permanent $3.50 ' "ssm
I FREDERICS VITRO JCOO IsSj f
f Permanent Wave . . . . " Y -sV
6hjmpoo and Marcel 50c I
(p Shampoo and Finger Wave 50c """)
Haircuts 25o O
NETA-fiTARIE Beauty Parlor
? 21 Sec. Mut Bldg., 12th A O B2327
College
By Cnrljlc Uodgkin
WOMEN FARMERS.
Interesting, though perhaps dis
illusioning, to college girls who
might some day be farm house
wives would be an article appear
ing in the August and September
Issues of the Atlantic Monthly
called "Letters of Two Women
Farmers."
One is Evelyn, a widow, who op
erates Howell's Point farm at Bet
terton, Md. The other is Caroline,
who, with her husband, operates
Wayside farm at Eve, Okl. The
woman In Maryland operates a
large fruit farm: the one in Okla
homa raises cattle and wheat.
The letters begin in the spring
when the peach orchards in Mary
land are in full bloom, and despite
the failures of the two previous
years and low prices of everything
farmers have to sell, Evelyn is op
timistic. She writes Caroline of
her optimism, and about the little
apples and peaches starting on the
trees, and how she hopes to pay
ou a few debts this year.
Caroline, from the Oklahoma
plains, writes back a different
story. The wind, wind, wind! It
blows and blusters until they can't
get the spring work started. One
day, she relates, the wind was so
ferocious it started four freight
cars on a siding to rolling and the
momentum of the wind carried
them forty miles. Coal for her
chick brooder, she said, cost $20 a
ton, it took two bushels of wheat
to buy a wick for her oil stove, and
two pounds of butter to pay for a
felt washer for the tractor. And
at the same time they were get
ting 31c for wheat, 7c (in trade)
for eggs, 8c for hens, and 2c for
steers.
About the $20 coal, the woman
in Maryland wrote back that she
could pay a few of her debts if she
could collect a bill for fruit she had
sold to a store in a mining town.
But the store keeper said he could
not pay the bill for the miners
could not pay their bills because
they were out of work. The min
ers were out of work because the
price of coal was so low the own
ers could not afford to operate.
men came the bad news from
Maryland. Just when the peaches
were all set, and she had contract
ed for boxes and crates, and had
had a man come out from New
York to appraise the crop and
make her an operating loan, the
fire blight hit her orchard, took all
the crop, and killed a laree num
ber of the trees.
The tomato crop in Maryland
was better, but the crated toma
toes in New York brought just lc
a pound, not enough to pay for her
cost of packing, transporting and
handling. She had nothing- left
for her labor and expense of grow
ing the tomatoes in the first place.
She rebelled most at the thought
that the men in her neighborhood
worked ten hours a day at the
farm for $1.00, and the longshore
men who loaded her tomatoes into
the boat, all union men, were get
ting 85c to $1.10 per hour.
And all tne time they were try
? to harvest and can the vege
table crop it rained, and rained.
and rained.
Meanwhile, in Oklahoma. Caro
line was paying 23c, the price of a
bushel of wh-;at, for a box of
Cream of Wheat. There was no
rain in Oklahoma from June-Sept-
tember. What little wheat had
not been killed by the hail storm
in June had died from the drouth.
One neighbor combined a field of
wheat from which, if he got seven
bushels per acre, he could break
even. He got only three bushels
per acre. The garden dried up with
the wheat. They had neither feed
for the winter, nor could they af
ford to sell their cattle at the ter
rible low prices.
In her last letter Caroline said
that they still had their friends,
the family was still well and
healthy, and that "perhaps in what
many people would call ignoble
poverty, we are rich."
Ag college students would find
the article interesting as a pic
ture of all the desperate situations
that farmers have found them
selves in during this depression.
But the letters are far too schol
arly to have been written by most
farm women in Oklahoma, or in
Maryland either. The woman in
Oklahoma quoted Shelley and
Masefield too freely, and the
woman in Maryland had too pro
found a knowledge of economics
her discourse in places reads al
most like Tassig or Fairchild, Fur
nace, and Buck.
The article reads more like the
work of a newspaper man in a
New York office, one who is thor
oughly familiar with the situation
from bis newspaper work, and who
Is extremely capable of putting
his observations down on paper.
(SoattG 12
Shuulit be tent In u$
note. They'll be properly
Cleaned
will look newer
) 0 will wear longer
will save money
Hf ARSITY
V CLEANER
221 No. 14
Joe Tucker
E3367
Roy Wythera
American Institution of 'Boy
Friend' Remains Mystery to
French People.
(Continued from Page 1.)
by no means give the tone to the
social life that they do in this
country.
Stoke Not Impressed.
Apparently Prof. Stoke was not
particularly impressed with the
French "chic" that we hear to
much about. "French women are
not particularly well dressed, yet
one occasionally does see some
striking outfits there; women seem
to use more freedom in giving the
cut to their clothes than American
women employ," he said.
Men and women in Germany are
more on a par than they are in
France, Stoke believes. "The Ger
man girls are permitted almost as
much liberty as American girls."
Coeducation is common there
thought not as prevalent as it is in
America. Girls are often seen with
men in the fashion described by
university students as dating.
"German girls are healthy and
husky," Mr. Stoke said, "and do
not possess a great deal of style
in dressing, according to American
ideas of taste. Marriage In Ger
many is conducted on practically
the same basis as it is Uore."
Belgian Women Free.
Belgian women have a good deal
of freedom, though not quite as
much as the German women do,
Dr. Stoke observed. More of them
attend universities. The reason for
this difference, he believes, is that
in all countries where the Catholic
church dominates education, co
education is not common.
"Belgian women are short,
heavy set, and extremely substan
tial looking, on the whole not as
smartly dressed as American
girls," he said.
In England the women have ss
much freedom as American girls
do, Stoke believes. He was im
pressed with the fact that they are
especially large in stature, and it
is not unusual to see couples in
which the woman is a good deal
taller than the man.
Fewer English Coeds.
"There are by no means the
number of coeds in England as
there are in this country, probably
because of the idea upon which the
educational system of Great Brit
ain is founded. Every one who can
afford it there goes to a private
school; thus most girls of the up
per middle classes attend finishing
schools rather than public univer
sities," Dr. Stoke stated.
English women smoke as much
on the streets as men in this coun
try do, Stoke observed. This situa
tion is a startling contrast to the
French women who are very sel
dom seen smoking.
Hampton Heath, a huge park in
the center of London, and a favor
ite rendezvous for young people,
is, in Professor Stoke's opinion,
one of the few solutions to the
problem which they must face.
This problem is how to get ac
quainted with more individuals of
their own age and interests, of
which a city the size of London
affords little opportunity.
Dramatic Club.
Dramatic club will hold its try
out for the year in the club rooms
on the third floor of the Temple
building at 7:30 on Thursday eve
ning. Those trying out should
have a short reading memorized
on any appropriate subject to use
in the competition.
You've Never,
- - 1
And in the trend of higher
prices, Connie Creations
.'7 s. are "still only" ....
Suede is to be found in the smartest
places... and rightly. In combination
or with self trim, Suede is modish and
wearable. These two Connie shoes
are lovely in both brown or black.
ffm Simm&ScnS
rORMrv ARMSTRONG
WASHINGTON STATE IS
OF
E
Most of Students Registered
At Western School Pledge
Support of System.
(From the Washington State Evernreeni
Not many Washington State stii.
dents can now say as did one stu
dent Wednesday "NRA
Where have I heard that before'?"
for close to two thousand Wash,
ington State college students, UUr.
ing registration Wednesday and
Thursday, signed cards expressing
their cooperation in the national
movement for industrial recovery
Presided over by Miss Amy
Lewellen, a desk in the administra
tion building was the scene of
NRA action for students, and prac
tically all those registering signed
cards.
In the opinion of Major R, r
Sloan, in charge of the State col
lege regiment, the students' atti
tude toward the NRA, in signing
up practically 100 percent, is very
encouraging. Students not only
have considerable buying power
but such willing response points to
much future assistance from stu
dents. Col'ege men and women
are responding with enthusiasm to
the call, "Have you signed?" al
though many, as one student said,
were more interested in the minu
mum wage provided than anything
else. Working under Major Sloan
in the State college NRA organiza
tion are the following captains,
with the groups which they are
contacting: Loyd Bury, unorgan
ized students; Mrs. B. L. Steele,
sororitk-s; Miss Amy Lewellen!
dormitories and residence halls'
and Harry M. Chambers, fra
ternities. NRA worker here emphasized
the fact that in order to reach the
100 percent goal at Washington
State college each student, even if
he signed an NRA card at home,
should sign a consumer's card here
at school. It is not yet too late to
sign a card and receive your NRA
sticker. Those who registered late,
or failed to sign a card during reg.
istration days, may do so by going
to the graduate manager's office in
the Administration building. If you
did not sign a card here because
you signed one at home, be sure to
help by signing another card here.
Develop Your Personality
BY LEARNING TO OANCE
Classes every Monday ami Wednes
day. New students admitted or
20r each.
Lueila Williams
Private Studio
1220 n !t. E)2o8
" Your Drug 5tbre
If It's a box tit randy, you'll enjr.y
Whitman's ('luH-nlntea or Gillen'l
Select Bo C.:ndle.i.
Iff deliver Free
The Owl Pharmacy
148 No. 14th Sl P St. PhoneB106t
CONN
Never C
- - -
T7
M
il