The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 11, 1933, Image 1

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    e Daily
Official Student Newspaper of the University of Nebraska
OCTOBER 11, 1933
PRICE 5 CENTS.
H
BAD W JUNIOR
COMMERCE CLUBS
UNITE IN PURPOSE
nmanization Officially
Invites Campus Society
to Affiliate.
RECEIVE JLLPRIVILEGES
n.n ip Rossianol Favors
ytaii -v -
Union; Will Encourage
Business Interests.
Members of the men's commer
rtd club of the college of business
Ministration of the university
SSly invited I to affiliate
-th the junior chamber of com
.rce Tuesdav. Oct. 10. Junior
chamber members stated that they
fhought the affiliation would prove
of mutual benefit.
Members of the Commercial
dub can become members of the
iunior chamber by making appli
cation, according; to Bedell. Mem
bership fee is five dollars, com
mercial club members receiving
full benefits from their joining.
Dean Le Rossignol Favors Union.
Dean Le Rossignol of the busi
ness administration college said
Tuesday that he thought the affili
ation of the men's commercial club
is a vital step toward bringing the
students of the university closer to
the business interests and indus
trial leaders of the city.
Junior chamber members wel
come the new addition to the
chamber, since many of the pres
ent members are former students
of the university." he continued.
I believe that the new affiliation
will add stimulus toward interest
in business administration organi
zations." About twenty university stu
dents attended their first meeting
Tuesday.
Film Taken by 'Herb' Gish
On Barnstorming Trip;
Feature Sports.
H. D. "Herb" Gish. former direc
tor of atrietics at the university,
will show films of his trip thru
Afnca at a business meeting of
the student branch of the Amer
ican Society ot Civil Engineers in
wo 102 .Mechanic Arts, Wednes
day night at 7:30 p. m.
In 1931 just alter the A.A.U.
meet held here in Lincoln, a group
of athletes, who had participated
in this meet, were selected to go
on a barnstorming trip through
Africa. Mr. Gish was chosen to
head this group on its trip. The
pictures were taken from the time
of their start from Lincoln, until
their return. Included in the film
are pictures of all the athletic
patrt in which the group partici-
AU students who are interested,
cd especially those who are In
terested in civil engineering are
welcome to attend this meeting,
wording to Mr. Richard Bab
president of the student
branch of the A. S. M. E.
I
LY
BIG SIS
Discuss Adjustment of New
Students to University
At Mass Meeting.
A T;5 .f a11 Ei Sister
teMi.M thtflr lDtrviewB with
Ti U1 PSrt'" held
&OCl- 12 iD EUeD Smlto
1?Urvic with the Little
ti T. ' b0 we.re assigned to girls
toi tl! 1 0 attmPt will be made
?wr if favorable adjust
to ik- been made 'n respect
UrarrhL condition. friends,
b ,7'' aDd scholastic stand
IS nP',ew" must made
ithTii? !;eport handed in be-
ft. 1 of the six weeks.
;tn iiJI s's,er are cooperating
'rKPa4Lambla Delta, hono
rbolastic sorority for fresh-
bt nl-, AU "tUe Sistem found
(he, j;UlBK help with their stu
"Wtv fnT . Ms'gnl to the so
Perr? LtutorinS- Mi8 Winona
tnap T? the scholarship
tlanf n.active in complet
JP for the cooperative en-
SchVir an university
taou rtkM held Nov- 5'
that at the meeting.
tiarch service t0 "me
StokTvill Lecture
0 Women Voter at Tea
P&JW w- Stoke of the
Pnjc flnc' dPrtraent will
Hu t u- memlM ot the
t a t. TKen Voter Thurs
hal, a at Carrie Belle Ray
wh f 2:30 ocock. Or.
l'" funded the economic
'Wi "''on while on a
thr" an 1P thl" "lmm,," has
In", toi'1:. "National
'c Conference." i
BLUE PRINT SENDS AGENTS
Engineering Magazine Staffs
Convene for Discussion
of Press Obstacles.
Three members of the Blue
Print magazine staff will attend
the Engineering Colleges Maga
zine association convention to be
held in Milwaukee Oct. 16 and 17,
according to the Engineering Pub
lications board. The members who
will attend are Wm. Johnston, gen
eral manager; George Hossack,
assistant business manager; Mar
vin Neurenberger, associate editor.
Problems common to all colle
giate engineering publications will
be discussed, and business of the
national chapter will be taken up.
The headquarters for all meetings
will be in the Student Union build
ing at Marquette university.
PROFESSORSWILL
SI. PAUL
MEETING OCT
Inter-Professional Institute
Holding Convention in
Minnesota.
Dean O. J. Ferguson, of College
of Engineering. Prof. Gayle C.
Walker, director of School of
Journalism, and Roy E. Cochran,
of the history department, will be
among the Lincoln delegates to at
tend the annual convention of the
Inter-Professional Institute which
will be held at the St. Paul hotel
in St. Paul, Minn., Oct. 11 to 13.
W. L. Albin, president of the Lin
coln chapter of the organization,
H. H. Wilson, and Dr. Benjman
Bailey a past national president of
the organization, of Lincoln, will
attend.
A dinner given in honor of the
present president of the organiza
tion, Roy E. Cochran, which will
be held Friday evening will be the
feature of the entertainment.
Larry Gould, second in command
on the Byrd expedition to the
south pole will speak. Three
main sessions and several commit
tee meetings will be held during
the meeting.
The Institute, a society organ
ized to advance the cause of pro
fessionalism and promote a better
feeling between professional men,
is a comparatively new organiza
tion with approximately twenty
chapters located in the middlewest
according to Cochran. The or
ganization rcccgaizcs twenty-two
professions.
Xeic Sort of 'Keep
OuC Sign Adopted
By I'rof. Carl Arndt
Ths nrohlem of keenine: bother
some agents and solicitors out of
faculty offices nas at iasi iuuuu
a solution through the sense of
humor of Karl M. Arndt, instruc
tor in economics at the Univer
sitv. instead of posting the usual
"Keep Out" whicn most salesmen
blithely ignore, Mr. Arndt has
placed a small card with a news
paper clipping on his door. The
card reads, "Salesmen. Agents,
Solicitors, Take Notice." Follow
ing this is a newspaper clipping
reading:
"Drastic salarv cuts were found
necessary to balance the budget
of the University of Nebraska for
next year ... A 22 percent reduc
tion was effected. . . ."
"That's all there is to it," ex
plained Arndt. "I've only been
bothered bv one salesman this
year, and he apologized for com
ing in. I find it most effective.'
NU-MEDS BANQUET TONIGHT
Organization's First Dinner
of Year at Grand noiei
Wednesday Evening.
The first Nu-Med banquet of the
..... ...m r nn Wednesday
night at six o'clock at the Grand
hotel, according 10 jam"
nH.fi nf the club. Dr. H. Win-
nett Orr, prominent Lincoln physi
cian and charter member of the
club, will deliver the main ad
dress. He will speak on recent de
velopments in the treatment of
bone lnrection ana a rcH
recent visit to hospitals in Eng
land and Ireland.
Nu-Meds are composed or stu
dents registered in pre-medical
Ahnut neventv-five mem-
bers of the club will attend.
ANNOUNCE PSI CHI MEETING
Psychology Fraternity Holds
First Session of Year
October 14.
nui iafinngl rinnnrarv D8 V-
chological fraternity, will meet
Saturday evening, Oct. 14. at Uw
home of Dr. D. A. Worcester, 2636
Garfield st. t. .
This will be the first meeting of
. uotinn hirf this vear and
will be purely social. Most meet
ings thruout the year will be open
and will be held in the psychologi
cal laboratory. All students and
faculty members are invited to at
tend. MISS FAULKNER WILL
DISCUSS IMJIA aui
Miss Kady Faulkner of the uni-
i... . fiartment Will
verHiiy iuic - . . . ,
present a lecture on Origins of In
dian Design at the Lincoln Wom
en's club. Friday. Oct. 1J.
topic will be Illustrated with
charts and pictures.
ATTEND
CUES! DRIVE
Eighty-Two Percent Quota
Is Reached in Campaign
Among Faculty.
BOSCHULT IS IN CHARGE
Donors, Whose Wages Have
Been Cut, Praised for
Hearty Support.
The university community
chest campaign followed the
example of the city campaign
and "went over the top," rais
ing 82 percent of the quota
set for the campus drive,
amounting to $5,22.50, follow
ing the final checkup Tuesday
afternoon by K. J. Boschult.
assistant purchasing agent of
the university in charge of the
campaign.
Faced with a 22 percent reduc
tion in salary as well as a reduc
tion in the number of faculty mem
bers by over sixty persons, uni
versity officials felt well pleased
with this year's subscriptions,
which fell little short of the $6,
952.00 quota set by community
chest campaign committee two
weeks ago before the drive started.
"We felt that the amount sub
scribed by the university faculty
members and employees was more
than could be expected in face of
the cut in salaries as well as a
cut in the number of faculty mem
bers by over sixty," declared
Boschult.
Have Six Teams.
The campus was covered by a
corps of workers comprised of six
teams under the direct supervision
of E. J. Boschult.
Faculty members of the univer
sity community chest drive were
(Continued on Page 2.)
E
Dr. Doane to Present Paper
Entitled 'The Librarian
As a Writer.'
Dr. Gilbert Doane, head of the
University library, will leave for
Chicago Saturday morning to at
tend a joint meeting of the Amer
ican Library association, the As
sociation of Research Librarians,
and the Bibliographic Society of
America.
Over 3.000 librarians from all
over the United States will attend
the conference to be held at the
Stevens hotel starting Monday,
Oct. 16, and continuing for a week.
At the convention there will be
many prominent speakers and Dr.
Doane will present a paper Wed
nesday on the subject, "The Li
brarian as a Writer."
FELLOWSHIP MEET
Speakers Are to Be Foreign
Students; YM Members
Will Attend.
Members of the YMCA deputa
tions committee met Sunday eve
ning, Oct. 8 at the home of C. D.
Hayes, secretary of the university
y. to plan the committee work for
this semester.
The group, whose purpose is to
conduct speakers to Hi-Y clubs
and other group meetings, has def
initely scheduled a visit to Nor
folk for Friday, Nov. 17. for a
world fellowship meeting under
the auspices of the Norfolk Hi-Y
club. The speakers will be for
eign students.
Request Visits.
Requests for visits have been re
ceived from the following towns
to date: Albion. Goehner, Madison,
Elgin, Tecumseh, Minden and
Alvo Bob Mario has charge of
arranging meetings with young
oeoples' church groups in Lincoln
and vicinity. The chief speakers
... . . , . . I .m Ath.p pnim.
will De siuueiiLs i'""' ""-
Members of the committee are
as follows: Charles Hulac chair
man Virgil Baker, Robert Mano,
Keith Jones, Shiroku Tao, Sagao
Ouchi. Norman Guidinger. A. C
Wischmeier, and William Mc
Cowin. BIZAD PAPERT0 APPEAR
First of Five Issues of News
Will Be Eeleased 23rd
Of October.
The first issue of the BizAd
news, paper published by "tudeoU
of that college, will appear Oct 23.
Included in this issue will be
rKtl.Knn nf th mm I
news oi me Biw.o-i-"-" - - -commercial
club of the university
-itn the Lincoln Junior chamber
of commerce and a discussion of
the present economic conditions by
several professors in tht- college.
There will be five ismirg of tne
BUad news during the yeir.
Attends Convention
I 1
r m
La
Courtesy of Lincoln Journal.
DEAN O. J. FERGUSON.
Dean O. J. Ferguson, Dean of
the Engineering College will attend
the Inter-Professional Institute an
nual convention to be held in St.
Paul, Minnesota, Oct. 11 to 13. The
other Nebraska delegates to this
conclave will be Roy E. Cochran, of
the History department and Pro
fessor Walker, chairman of the
School of Journalism and three
Lincoln business men. The purpose
of the organization is to create a
better feeling between professional
men.
PERSHING RIFLES
ANNOUNCES LIS!
I Thirty-Five Basic Military
Men Named by Members
Of Organization.
Pershing Rifles, honorary basic
military organization, pledged
thirty-five new men after the vot
ing on the candidates by the com
pany at the meeting Tuesday eve
ning. The candidates were chosen
in a tryout on last Thursday.
The applicants were tested in
the manual of arms, squad move
ments, facings, and military cour
tesy by the officers of the military
staff in the tryout. Other tryouts
will be held later in the year for
the men who had no experience at
the time of this tryout,
The new pledges are Richard L.
Rider, Oscar Legg, George Eager,
Floyd Baker, Arthur Abbott, Sam
Levitch, Donald Jorgenson, Donald
Wiemer, James R. Fulton, William
Hamilton. John Brain, Carroll
Quinton, William Christie and Rob
ert Walters.
Other new pledges are William
Fradenburg, Brice Teeter, Robert
Heck, Paul Miller, Phillip Lasero
witz, Robert Schricker, George
Gray, Walter Oeltjen, Harry Swan
son, Robert Mowbray, Clark Gib
son, Herbert Kaplan, Jack Avery.
Robert Bemis. Ross Alexander,
Robert Shellenberg. Robert Hol
land, Andrew White. Arthur L.
Smith, William C. Ritchie, and
Richard Mosgrove.
The new pledges are to appear
at the next meeting of the com
pary next Tuesday at five o'clock
in Nebraska Hall in uniform ac
cording to Max Emmert, captain
of the company.
MOufflTlEi
Member Local Sigma Delta
Chi Chapter to Leave
Wednesday Night.
44 SCHOOLS IN GROUP
Dick Moran, member of the Ne
braska chapter of Sigma Delta
Chi, professional journalism fra
ternity, will leave tonight to at
tend the annual convention of the
fraternity in Chicago on October
12. 13. 14 and 15. He was elected
chapter delegate to the convention
last spring.
Problems confronting the jour
nalistic profession in connection
with the NRA and the possibility
of a national organization of edi
torial employees of newspapers
will be discussed at the convention
in addition to the regular business
of the fraternity.
Representatives from the forty
four chapters of the fraternity,
which was founded in 1903 at De
Pauw university. Greencastle. Ind.,
will be in Chicago for the conclave.
The national office of the frater
nity has arranged a program of
entertainment for the visiting dele
gates in which the Century of
Progress and the Stanford-Northwestern
football game will be in
cluded. Delegates will be housed at the
various fraternity residences at
Northwestern university, where
the convention meetings will take
place. Men nationally prominent in
journalistic fields will attend the
convention and speak to the representatives.
OF NEW
PLEDGES
Ramsay Announces Prize
Awards for Best Art
Contribution.
DEADLINE IS OCT. 25
Permanent Sketch Will Be
Chosen by Committee
Of Three.
Announcement of plans to
conduct a student contest to
design a permanent cover for
the Nebraska Alumnus, official
publication of the university
alumni organization, was made
Tuesday by Ray Kainsay. ed
itor of the publication.
The contest will be held open to
all students of the university, and
will carry as a cash award for first
place, a prize of $7.50 for the cover
design chosen, Ramsay declared.
The design accepted for the pub
lication cover will be the perma
nent cover for all future issues,
and must be turned in not later
than Oct. 25. It must be presented
for competition in the regular size
of the magazine cover, ten and
one-half by seven and three-quarters
inches.
Select Three Judges.
The contest entrants will be
judged by a committee composed
of Dwight Kirsch, Ray Ramsay
and Harry Becker.
"All sketches submitted must
be planned with black ink and
white paper, and must carry out
the ideals of the university and its
alumni," declared Ramsay. Sketch
es do not have to be finished or
entirely completed, as long as the
judges are able to determine the
purpose and rough idea behind the
individual's conception, Ramsay
stated. Further details can be ob
(Continued on Page 2.)
E
Tentative Arrangements Call
For University Aid in
Celebration.
Armistice day celebration tenta
tive arrangements call for co-operation
with the university accord
ing to Trev E. Gillaspie, chairman
in charge of the celebration. Home
coming will be observed by uni
versity students on that day.
In the morning, all patriotic or
ganizations are expected to par
tifinatp in 11 nnrade through town
which will end at the Memorial
stadium, where appropriate cere
mnnips will be held. Gen. H. J. Paul
will be marshal of the day.
Gillaspie statea mat nis comum-
fas m'qo Tvnrltine' with GuV C.
Chambers. D. X. Bible and Colonel
Ourv. The Huskers will piay rtan-
as that afternoon.
SENNING ON TRI-STATE
CIVIC HUONG STAFF
Political Science Association
Promotes Teaching in
Secondary Schools.
A tri-state conference including
Nebraska. Kansas and Missouri to i
promote the teaching of govern-1
ment in secondary schools and the i
Improvement of civic training is
kino- niRnned under the auspices
of the American Political Science
association. Dr. J. P. Senning is
representing Nebraska on the con
ference committee.
The conference which will be
held shortly before Christmas in
Kansas City will be attended by
superintendents of public schools,
social science teachers in colleges,
and teachers in government and
civics in secondary schools of the
three states. A like conference was
held here last year, but it is be
lieved that larger towns and a
larger clientele can be reached
through a tri-state meeting.
Sponsoring the conferences will
be Dr. J. P. Senning of Nebraska.
Professor T. H. Reed of the Uni
versity of Michigan. Edgar Daw
son of Hunter college in New York
City. Dr. Harold Dodd. president of
Princeton, and Dr. Earl Crecraft
of Akron university.
SPONSOR ART PROGRAMS
Fine Arts School Arranges
Sunday Entertainment
In Morrill Hall.
Art programs, sponsored by the
school of fine arts, will be held in
the downstairs auditorium of Mor
rill hall beginning the first Sunday
of November.
The school of fine arts and the
university museum are co-operating
in order that the programs
sponsored by both organisations
may be held in the downstairs au
ditorium. Topics will be chosen that will be
of interest to the general public.
RELIGION ISJESPER TOPIC
Patterson States That There
Never Can Be a Society
Without Religion.
Dr. Charles Patterson, of the
philosophy department, spoke for
Vespers Tuesday evening, Oct. 10,
on the nature of religion.
"Religion is a shared mode of
living that expresses itself in wor
ship of what is recognized as di
vine and in co-operative work for
the realization of the highest
good," was the definition for re
ligion that Dr. Patterson gave dur
ing his talk.
"There can be a society without
art, science, philosophy, but never
one without a religion," said Dr.
Patterson.
KOSMET KLUB 10
E
E
Oct. 19 Set as Deadline for
Submitting Acts for
Annual Show.
The first call for applications
for skits to be presented in Kosmet
Klub's annual fall revue will be is
sued to fraternities and sororities
today, Frank Musgrave, president
of trie Klub, announced after a
meeting of the organization last
night in the Klub rooms.
Applications for short entertain
ment features will be taken at the
Klub office in the basement of U
hall or by any member of the or
ganization until Wednesday, Oct.
19, Musgrave said. Any fraternity,
sorority, or other campus organ
ization is eligible to submit a skit
for consideration.
The Klub has not yet decided on
any definite number of skits to be
used in the revue. Musgrave indi
cated, but in all probability about
ten or twelve three to eight minute
acts will be selected.
Start Work.
The president, who is chairman
of the production committee for
the show, urged all organizations
planning to submit skits to start
working on them immediately. Or
ganizations submitting applica
tions will be given a longer time
than usual in which to work up the
act before it will be judged.
Selection of skits will be made
early in November. The number
of acts to be used in the show will
depend entirely upon the quality
of material submitted, but not
more than twelve will be used,
Musgrave said. Time limits for
each skit will be announced when
selections are made.
GRADS RECEIVE POSITIONS
Five Chemistry Students of
Summer School Class
Have Employment.
Five of the chemistry students
who graduated last August with
Ph. D. degrees now have positions.
They are: John M. Brackenbury
who is research chemist for the
Shell Oil company at Wilmington,
Calif.
Harold P. Brown, professor of
chemistry at the Kansas City uni
versity at Kansas City, Mo.
Royce Le Roy, who returns to
the position of professor of chem
istry at Doane College.
Albert Lightbody, who will be
assistant professor of science and
mathematics at Chadron State
Teachers college.
Leon A. Sweet, research chem
ist for the Commercial SolvenU
corporation at Terre Haute, Ind.
THE WEATHER FORECAST
The weather report for Lin
coln and vicinity is cloudy and
unsettled tonight; Wednesday
fair, not much change in tem
perature, according to T. A.
Blair. For Nebraska the report
is generally fair tonight and
Wednesday.
RECEIVE
NIRES
FOR
KITS
Capt. G. W. Spoerry Defends Army
And Navy as Organizations Fostering
Good Citizenship in United States
"The primary mission of the
United States army is to guaran
tee the continued existence of the
government by the people in these
TTnitprf Statps acainst all internal
and external enemies of whatso
ever nature," stated Capt. G. W.
Spoerry, instructor in the military
department in his article "The
Army Promotes Good Citizenship,"
which appeared in a recent issue of
the Army and Navy Journal.
He writes that this has been
done in many instances and may
be done again during the life of
our government, by resort to bat
tle. Through the years, however,
the army has learned that there
are often times other and better
ways of meeting and conquering
the enemies who would destroy us
and that is by making better and
more loyal citizens of the inhabi
tants. "It is a recognized fact, and
may be stated without fear of con
tradiction, that there exists in the
United States no national organ
ization, other than the army and
navy, which inspires men to be
come better citizens; that stand3
ever ready to enforce the orders of
the people through their legal rep
resentatives; that is free from
draft and corruption; that has no
political preferences; and that can
TO
ALPHA
F
Panhellenic Cups Are Given
To High Sororities at
Annual Banquet.
PLAYERS PRESENT SKITS
Dean Heppner and Mrs. E. A.
Burnett Compiiment the
Trophy Winners.
Panhellenic scholarship
awards presented at 1 lie an
nual banquet, held last niylit iit,
the Cornhusker hotel gave Zr-ta
Tan Alpha first place with the
highest scholarship recorded
for the past year. Phi Omea
Pi wms awarded second place
with Alpha Chi Omega, lliird:
Kappa Delta, fourth: biirni.i
Helta Tan. fifth; Delta Zeta,
sixth; and Tri Delta, seventh.
In foregoing years it has been
customary to present the sorority
showing the largest scholarship
improvement with a trophy. This
year the group winning this award
was included in the high seven
so it was decided to give thfs cup
to the sorority in the highest two
thirds below 'the high seven. An
nouncement of this prize will be
made at a later date.
Use Nebraska Colors.
Aproximately 600 sorority wom
en attended the Panhellenic ban
quet. The Cornhusker ballroom
was decorated in Nebraska colors
of scarlet and cream. Table ap
(Continued on Page 4.)
Oz
Black Will Entertain
With Lecture 'On
Cartooning.'
Oz Black, Lincoln State Journal
cartoonist, will speak before the
next Hobby club meeting. He has
chosen as his subject, "On Car
tooning." This is a topic of much
interest to the Hobby club as they
are specializing in that field. Oz
Black will probably give an illus
trated lecture.
Several other programs with
features are being planned by
members of the committee in
charge of entertainment. James
Pickering. Nebraska alumni, has
accepted an invitation to talk be
fore this group in the near future.
His specialtv is also cartooning.
Dwight Kirsch. head of the cos
tume and designing of the univer
sity, will give a lecture on the sub
ject under which his department
comes.
The Hobby club has been or
ganized at the university to en
courage women to become inter
ested in some special function so
that their spare time will be occu
pied by something that is of real
interest to them.
tasseITTlaOggFe TRIP
Entire Group to Go to Game
At Manhattan, Kansas,
Saturday, Oct. 21.
Sixtv-one Tassels, comprising
the entire group, will make the
trip to Manhattan for the Kansas
Aggies game on Oct. 21. it wa.i
announced at a meeting Tuesday
noon in Ellen Smith hall. The pop
steis also will see the team olf to
Ames this Friday evening.
The six new members elected at
the meeting are: Eleanor Neale.
Betty Beck. Madeline Raymond.
Ruth Haggman. Elizabeth Shearer,
and Edythe Long.
point to one hundred and fifty
years of honorable and faithful
service.
Army Does Not Incite War.
He states that it has been said
utterly without foundation, that
the army incites war and makes
militarists of the youth of the na
tion. Army men and their families
abhor war because it strikes their
homes first. The army has nothing
to do with declaring war. Such
declarations are made by civil au
thorities upon failing to make a
settlement with their adversaries.
Even then the army only fights
long enough to enable the author
ities to come in and make the set
tlement. "The army not only instructs
its own personnel along the lines
above mentioned, but does more,
and each year conducts such a
course in the many Citizens' Mili
tary Training camps for over
35,000 boys, boys in whom we find
the men of tomorrow. The more
ambitious of these boys, attend
our high schools, colleges and uni
versities, and there come in con
tact with the junior and mrnior
units of the Reserve Officers'
Training Corps. The demand for
additional units by schools every
l Continued on Page 2.)
FIRST
ZETA
AWARD
TAU
OR SCHOLARSHIP
r