SUNDAY, APRIL 7, 1935. THE DAILY NEBRASKAN TWO Daily Nebraska.! Station A, Lincoln. Nabraak. OrFICIAt STUDENT PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Whla DDr la represented for Qeneral advertising by tha wma paper NbrMKJ PrtM Aaacolatlon. Associated CToUfolatf tyrt -mm 1914 tMl!K)3Sl22Ssii entered aa aecond-ciaae matter at tha PMtoWIe! . IIM. act St Octobe? W7. author.!. January W. 12t. EDITORIAL STAFF MANAGING EDITORS Irwin Ryan Virginia Salleck NEWS EDITORS Frtd NlcKlaa Arnold Lavln. Sancha K.lbourn. W Mary.u P.ter.en Woman'. Editor Dorth.. Fulton Editor BUSINESS STAFF Richard Schmidt Business Managar ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGERS Truman Obemdortt Bob Shellenbarp Robart Funk Rushing Revisions Seem in Order. "Ml ON DAY night members of the Interfraternlty council will bring before their respective fra ternity chapters the subject of rush rules for next year if Instructions given at the council's last meet ing are heeded. Forgetting to present for chapter action many matters which the council later decides is a common sin of council members. It is to be hoped that they will not forget Monday night for no subject more vital to the fraternity's very ex istence exists than that of rushing. Numerous flaws in last year's rules have been pointed out and a substantial number of changes cave been recommended. Two tesues, however, stand out above the rest as calling foi revision, the five-day rush week and the rule prohibiting rushees from staying in fraternity houses during rush week. It is interesting to note that as early as last spring, the alumni board of control recommended to the interfraternity council that rush week be shortened and that rushees be allowed to remain in houses during the rushing period. Both bits of advice were politely ignored and the youthful Greeks went merrily on their way to an expensive five-day rush week and an unknown but probably substantial number of Infractions of the other rule. Since that time some houses have closed, others are on the verge of disaster, while a large number are literally shaking in their shoes. Few can boast of prosperity. It would seem that intelligent think ing leaves but sne course of action open on each of these matters from the fraternity man's point of view and that is revision. In the first place, fraternities cannot afford the drastic drain on their treasury which the five-day rush week exacts. To entertain and also feed a large number of rushees for so long a period is to court disaster unless a house is numbered among a select few who are prosperous. And on the face of it, five days of rushing is too long. It leaves Greek and rushee alike worn out and disgusted with attempts to entertain and be entertained. Few in deed are the rushees who are really going to pledge and do not have their minds made up In three days. A three-day rush week would easily suffice, and adequately serve the purpose of both frater nity and rushee. Its adoption by campus Greeks would be a progressive step and should be secured at once. Arguments for permitting rushees to remain in houses during rush week may not be so self-edi-dent but most certainly the advantages exist. Many rushees reach Lincoln without the faintest idea of where they will stay. When they finally do de cide, often they must pay a month's rent in ad vance. Naturally a fraternity's chance to pledge and move in a man who has his rent paid elsewhere are materially decreased. In many cases the fresh man stays in that one spot the entire year and the chances for him to become a fraternity man dwin dle as each day passes. And it is a well-known fact that rushees do stay overnight in fraternity houses during rush week despite the rule to the contrary. It is so cleverly done sometimes, however, that it escapes detection, and the group that does shoot square Is thus placed at an unfair disadvantage. The sham and pretense which Is practiced in regard to this rule should be eliminated now along with the rule for once and for all. Today U a day of testing. Probably in no in stance is this more true than in the case of fra ternities. Nebraska fraternities have an opportunity to prove themselves capable of looking out for their own economic Interests by revising the above rules. The test should prove interesting. Dead Organizations. kjeWS stories during the past year reveal that Camxna Alpha Chi took charge of an advertising campaign for the Prairie Schooner; Sigma Delta Chi had a hand In staging the Nebraska High School Press association convention: Delta Sigma Rho sponsors the intramural debate tournament. One could go on at some length enumerating the worthwhile activities of various professional and honorary organizations. The point is that they re active and functioning. On the other side of the fence are a large number of groups supposedly maintaining a place on the campus, but they are not fulfilling the duties of that place. Many are existent in name only, not even bothering to pledge members or hold occa sional meetings. Others take that much trouble, but let their activities stop there. They pledge members, collect an initiation fee. Issue t shingle or a pin, hold one or two meetings and call it a day. UNIVERSITY TO HOLD LAST CONVOCATION (Continued from Page 1.1 a kind of radiation that comes from the outer universe. Their voltages are me.mired in the mil lions and even billions. Mats Converted Into Energy. Most of Doctor Millikan's work goes back to the newly discovered theories of physics. A generation or so ago many people can remem ber that muss and energy were us ually considered somewhat distinct things. But beginning a few years ago actually was converted into energy in a laboratory. The idea, of course, is that in the outer worii the Interchange of mass and energy are taking place on a very large scale. A few years ago it was also found that elements could be broken down. Ernest Ruther ford of McGill university, now Lord Rutherford of Nelson, Eng land, secured hydrogen from nitro-1 The President Wins. A FTER a long battle, slowed up by many dead locks, President Roosevelt finally won out on his four billion dollar work-relief plan. Agreement was reached Friday afternoon and Congress sent the appropriations bill on for the president's signa ture. Despite objections of the opposition party, and despite dissension within his own ranks the presi dent has been determined that no person in the United States shall go without food or shelter. Me has further determined that the indigent should not receive their support from a respect-destroying dole, but from actual labor. There of course has been a great hue and cry about adding to the public debt, and republicans see in the bill an implement with which the presi dent can assure his re-election. But at the same millions of people who either would have starved or gone on local and private charity will now be fed. It is the old question of the good of humanity versus the good of a few. The Dally Nebraskan has decided to sponsor a contest of Its own for the best Ivy Day poem. All entries will be thrown in the waste basket and the winner will be awarded a non-fillable rubber foun tain pen. rpHOMAS Wolfe's mo ru vet nas and leaves the exhausted reader no neat phrases with which it may be characterized. One remem bers twenty or fantastically emotional interludes but how to tell of them? It is much easier to talk about Reverend Lloyd C. Douglas' women who, still "Magnificent Obsession," want another soothing hypo-shot of God-consciousness. But the massively "Of Time and the River" Is another matter. In the first place, Thomas Wolfe's book is not a novel at all, but is a legend of Man's hunger In his youth, as he himself calls it. It is the story of Eugene Gant's hunger, his search for Something in Altamont (In the South), Harvard Univer sity, New York, Oxford, Paris, and rural France. At the end, on page 912, Eugene Gant, returning to America, knows that his heart is caught. "After all the blind, tormented wanderings of youth, that woman would become his heart's centre and the target of his life. . ." But he has seen the woman, has never even spoken to her. The whole of the book is concerned with Gene's restless peregrina tions. I cannot help thinking of this book as a won derfully Integrated anthology. There are passages of earthy prose and passages which are highly and effectively poetic. taken from their context and published separately; indeed, one of the episodes is Wolfe's "Portrait of Bascom Hawke" And there are essays to point out the meaning of things, inquired into America's dualism, and pond- erlngs about Man's youth which "is so full of an guish and of magic and he never comes to know it aa it is, until it has gone from him forever." Further, there are pages which are so unmistakably Joycean that they Irishman himself: of the pot! A dove, a doe, It is a faultless swan, I say, a pretty thing! . . ." And there is use of con trasted moods which is not unlike T. S. Eliot's: "All right! All right! Come on, Bill! He's drunk, he's crazy! . . . And might seem to be glint of an eye is an important thing to the cosmos. Whatever the book may be, it is certainly Ameri can through and through, American in its factual prose and hysterical poetry, American in its piling up of detail Humanists may shake their heads over the book's lack of classic restraint and class-struggle propagandists may shake their heads over the ab sence of proletarian ballyhoo; but the book can not be dismissed with head-shaking. "Of Time and the River" Is of the "Incomparable substance of America." In the book there is one passage which is re markably revealing as to how and why such a tower of words was ever got together. Thomas Wolfe's autobiographical Eugene Gant Is writing. "The words were wrung out of him i na kind of bloody sweat, they poured out of finger tips, spat out of his snarling wrote them with he wrote them with bis blood, his spirit; they were wrenched out of the last secret source and substance of his life . . . They were all there without coher ence, scheme, cr reason flung down upon paper like figures blasted by the spirit's lightning stroke, and in them was the huge chronicle of the billion forms, the million names, the huge, single, and in comparable substance of America." And this is gen. Some people have suggested that this achievement, coming at thu close of the World war will be remembered tn future history, when the World war is almost for gotten. Some scientists believe that the cosmic rays come from the crea tion of matter, the making of the universe. Others believe that they come from the annihilation of mat ter. Millikan had generally been Identified as the exponent of the former idea, but after an address In London, the question was widely discussed as to whether or not he had changed his position. It was suggested by some that annihila tion and creation are exactly one and the same thing. Milliksn States Theory. MUltktn himself stated the fol lowing regardln gthls point: "Snma havft called this DUildlnr nn of th common elements out of hydrogen the creation of matter. altho as far as I anow a wu It may be that the chief value of some of these groups will make Itself apparent after the student has graduated, but that is no atonement for pres ent inactivity.. There is too much dead wood on the campus. The Student Council should go over the organization list with a fine tooth comb and ruthlessly lop off those that have not proven their worth. The day of the "Joiner" is definitely gone. Browsing Among Tha Books Br Maurice Johnson huge and gusty "Of Time and me c.neti oi a uiree-uay uecuiui'n thirty sharply realistic scenes and "Green Light," his latest hoax for sighing over the badly-written Many of the episodes might be with a few changings of names. might be the work of the blind "Out, out upoj you, scrapings Tie goe to bedde at noone." ALL in all, "Of Time and the River" is a pretty amazing affair. And in one sense the story obscured by its detail, for Wolfe throat like writhing snakes; he his heart, his sweat, his guts; "Of Time and the River." have never used that phrase. In other words, the transformation of mass into radiant energy thru the building up of common elements out of hydrogen which in my London paper I called the "partial annihilation of matter' is one and the same thing with what some have chosen to call the 'creation of matter.' " LOCKAKD PAINTINGS SHOWN AT TEMPLE Water color paintings by Robert L Lockard are now on exhibit by the department of architecture In the Temple building. Mr. Lock ard la with the William Rockhill Kelson museum of art in Kansas City, and is former student of Linus Burr Smith, chairman of the department of architecture at Ne braska In his twenty paintings on display he has used prairie scenes for backgrounds. GLADSTONE SUBJECT OF KNAPLUND SPEECH AT English Premier Revealed as Interesting Figure to Students. Gladstone wns revealed by Frofcssor I. A. Knaplund of Wisconsin university, in l'riday morning's convocation period, to be a figure of especial inter est to students, because of his pol icy of a liberal education, his con ception of history as the only true philosophy, and his interest in reading. With a library consisting of approximately 40,000 books, he indulged in a habit distasteful to librarians that of scribbling In the books. From this, we find that he liked to read light things, as well as scholarly. Dr. Knaplund commends the fact that Gladstone didn't become fossilized stereo typed. A Scottish ancestry, apparently tempered his conception of finance, his father being a nara-neaaea businessman who held a good many home discussions of private and public financial matters. Al tho his father left him a million dollars, Gladstone was so saving that he kept the unused stationery from letters that came to him with extra sheets. He was no, however, a miser having given away more than $600,000 to charity before his death. Gladstone said: "You cannot train colonies except by giving them freedom, to keep them satis fied. Don't impose any tribute and by treating them generously, they will give us what we never could wring from them." As a matter or fact, those possessions treated as Gladstone advocated, . (Canada, Australia, and New Zealand among others) did come loyally to the aid of England in 1914. Gladstone believed that the ob ject of a peace treaty was to pro vide peace. He denounced war. "War means retrogression, stimu lating lust, stirring up the evil pas sions. It has never elevated man morally or spiritually." Dr. Old father, in introducing Professor Knaplund declared that the latter knows as much about Gladstone as any living man. He is the author of one book on this sub ject and several others are at press. 60 TASSELS ATTEND I Dance Follows Dinner at Lincoln Hotel Saturday. INSTALL NEW OFFICERS Sixty attended the annual ban quet of Tassels, honorary girls pep organization, which was held Sat urday evening in the Venetian room of the Lincoln hotel. The dinner was preceded by initiation of pledges and installation of new orficers and was iouowea Dy a dance at which Pat Ash and his orchestra furnished the music. Elizabeth Shearer was installed as president; Eleanor Neale, vice president; Erma Bauer, treasurer; Jean Hoag, secretary; Eleanor mc Fadden, publicity chairman, and Virginia Kelm, notification chair man. Those who were made active mebers of the organization are as follows: Erma Bauer, Clover Beckman, Lucile Berger, Elsie Buxman, Gayle Caley, Janice Campbell, Alphia Catania, Doris Cochran, Gertrude Fontain, Doro thea Fulton, Jean Hoag, Virginia Keim, Rosemary Kane, Sancba Kllbourn, Theodora Lohrman, Ruth Matachuliat, Eleanor McFad den, Mildred Miller, Elizabeth Moomaw, Ruth Nelson, Josephine Olsen, Jean Palmer, Margaret Philllpe, Helen Runkel, Thelma Schnitter, Virginia Veith, June Wagner, Jean Walt, Maxine Whis tler, Dolores White, and Mary Yo der. Mrs. D. X. Bible and Barbara. who is an honorary member of Tassels, were guests at the ban quet. Also present were the or ganization's sponsors, Miss Pauline Gallatly and Julienne Deltkin. Mr. and Mrs. William Newens, ana Mr. and Mrs. K. O. Broady were chaperons for the dance following the banquet. L Optional Inspection Trips For Fifty Start Next Week. Inspection trips to Chicago, and thru western Nebraska have been planned "oy engineering students for next week. Between &o ana tu win make the trips. Mechanical and chemical engineers will leave for Chicago about April 15. Civil, electrical, and agricultural engineering groups will leave at various times during that week. They will go to North Platte for Inspection of the power and irriga tion construction work, and from there ag engineers will go farther west to visit other irrigation proj ects. Civil engineering students SI an a trip on to Columbus; and it electrical group will visit sev eral power stations ss well as in specting the radio and monitor sta tion at Grand Island. Such inspection trips wers for merly a requirement to graduation in engineering, according to Dean O. J. Ferguson. Because of hard tiroes they have been discontinued for the past two years, he explains, but have been returned this year as optional with the students. CONCLAVE BANQUE OFFICIAL BULLETIN Catholic Missions. Catholic Men Students are re minded of the Missions to be held next week, April 7 to 14, at the Cathedral, 14th and K streets. Masses will be read at 6:00, 6:45 and 8:00 A. M., and Evening Servi ces begin at 7:30 P. M. This mis sion Is conducted by the Passionist Fathers, and the services this week are for men only. Catholic Students. Thorn l tn be a creneral meet in Z of all Catholic students in Room 205A, in the Temple, at 8 o'clock Sunday afternoon, April 7. There nrill h n short nroeram. followed by a group discussion conducted by Fr. Lawrence F. Obrist, on the subject of Ordination to the Priest hood. All Catholic Btudents are in vited to attend. There will be no general meeting on Sunday after noon, April 14, aa scheduled. Interctub Council, Rurh Tnterclub council will meet at 7 :30 Tuesday evening in room 8 at university hall. J.L Dr. John D. Clark Lectures On 'indoctrination' at Saturday Meeting. Prof. J. L. Sellers, professor of Ampriran historv. was elected president of the Nebraska History reacners association m. iuo session held in Lincoln Saturday. He was formerly vice president of the group. Dr. John 1J. Claris, lnsirucior ui the university last semester, talked nn "Indoctrination" at the Satur day morning meeting of the group at Social science nan. in nis aa dress, Clark attacked the report of th American Historical society's committee for the investigation of social students. He declared that American teachers have made great progress in the direction of academic free dom, and he denied the assertions of John Dewey and Fror. ueorge F. Counts that American teachers are mere representatives of preda tory interests. The assertions oi fror. counts that capitalism has failed and is doomed brought the following re nort from Dr. Clark. "We all know about the defects of capitalism, but we also Know inai n is me uuiy economic system wnicn nas pro duced enough to support an in creasing population and at the same time permiea poiiucai nu economical liberty to the individ ual." Prof. G. O. Virtue discussed the same report at the breakfast meet ing at the University club. A reso lution in memory or ur. t. w. Fline. former professor of the uni versity was adopted. The twentytnira annual meeting of the group was brought to a rinse at the luncheon, when Dr. Paul Knaplund addressed the or ganization. P Professor Relates History, Development Helium Industry. Relatine the history and de velopment of the helium industry, Prof. W. L. DeBaufre, chairman of the applied mechanics depart ment, addressed students mem bers of the Chemical Engineering society, Thursday evening. Prof. DeBauire aescnDea me government helium plant at Arma rillo, Tc., and explained the method of extracting helium from natural gas. He traced the process of the gas thru the plant, and also told of the extraction of nitrogen as a by-product. "Helium was aiscoverea in tne spectrum of the sun in 1886," he said, "and its extraction was made a few years later by an American scientist Little was done with helium until the World war." De Baufre stated, "when a method of extraction was discovered by a graduate student at Kansas uni versity. The government then erected three helium plants." The plants failed to operate ef fectively and the governmnet ap pointd Professor DeBaufre and two others to inspect them. After their investigation they designed the new plant now located at Armarillo. Former Engineering Dean Visits University Campus O. V. P. Stout, formerly dean of the college of engineering, was a visitor on the campus last week. Mr. Stout is now living in Califor nia and has been assigned by the federal department of agriculture to investigate the practical aspects of the possibility of use of water in the Platte river for irrigation. SELLERS NAMED HEAD STATE HISTORY INSTRUCTORS is B6755 Plans for Ag Fair Take Shape Under Student Guidance Farmers' Fair Diana are taking on definite forms as the entire Ag student bodv rolls un its collective sleeves and pitches in. Over on the north side of the Dairy nuuaing workers have constructed a per ltdonr stace. with a group of evergreens as a back drop, which will be tne setting ior the pageant, one oi me leaiures of the Fair. Practice him becun on the five different enlnndes Of tllO Pageant. and the campus now abounds with embryo Indians, hunters, trappers, missionaries, courtiers, soldiers, and even Spanish dancers. Every student in the Ag uouege win iane part in making the Fair a sure success. The promotion committee is planning a giant bonfire rally for nevr Thursday evenine on the HniHrotrA street camnus at which a record breaking crowd Is ex pected. This will be the tnira rany of the present Fair campaign. COPY BRISFS (Continued from Page 1.) r.roat Britain, it aDDears. la mnra nntlmlatlc. OVPT the Situation. Her young lord privy seal, Capt. Antnony maen, lecenuy reiumw from a peace mission in principal countries of Wurone. His interpre tation of conditions will undoubt edly color his country s proposals at Stresa. Great Britain hopes for unified tfnrnne and seems a lit tle worried over France's attitude toward Germany in tne Apru 10 special session of the League of Nations. F.dwnrd .T. Reillv. who ealned much fame as defense counsel for the rinnmeri Rnmn Hnuntmann in the Lindbergh case, is definitely out. Mrs. Hauptmann, now in Milwaukee, reiterated her state ments enncernin? his dismissal. But Reilly wants his Job back. He wants his 2.vnnn fee. too. and of fered to tour the country In an at tempt to raise funds to pay his bill. If he president signs the work- relief bill when he returns to the white house Wednesday a new record will have been made in this land of enthusiasm for record breaking. The biggest single ap propriation bill in American his tory, calls for $4,880,000,000 in ex penditures. If one could take that many dollar bills and lay them end to end, he would have 462,121 miles of currency, or enough to circumscribe the world eighteen and one-half times, at the equator. That's a lot of money. While the work-relief bill held congress' greatest interest, other important matters were also going ahead. Old age pension, unemploy ment insurance and mother's nid bills progressed the last of the week, past the ways and means committee. Following the commit tee's approval, it this week be comes the major legislation . E Eleven Nebraska Exhibitors Selected to Decorate U. S. Buildings. CHOSEN IN SECRET VOTE Paintine-s bv all eleven of the painters chosen by the government to execute eleven murais ana iwo works of sculpture in the new postoffice and justice rieDartment buildings have been exhibited at the university during the past sev eral years under the ausjvees of the Nebraska Art association. Be sides the eleven artists, two sculp tors have neen engagea ior tne work, according to a recent article In the New York Times. The artists were chosen by se cret ballot by an advisory commit tee, no member of which knew who his fellow-members were. The eleven painters announced are as follows: Tnomas Benton, ueorge Biddle, John S. Curry, Rockwell Kent. Leon Kroll. Reginald Marsh, Henry Varnum Poor. Boardman Robinson, Eugene Savage, Maurice Sterne and Grant Wood. The sculptors are Paul Manship and William Zorach. Canvases bv Benton. Kroll. and Wood are owned by the Nebraska Art association, while an example of each of the work of Eugene Savage and John S. Curry is con tained in the F. M. Hall collection that is owned by the university. The permanent collection ownea by the Nebraska Art association, and the paintings in the F. M. Hall collection are exhibited In the sec ond and third floor corridors of Morrill hall, and may be seen be tween the hours of 9 to 5 daily, and 2 to 5 on Sunday. Beloit college (Wis.) students were told recently that "the art of living consists of finding the place between too little and too much," by one of their professors. $10 Free Enter Your Reasons in the Central Cafe Contest Weekly Special Lew than 6 15c. (RefIar Price 18c) Send your Cleaning with your Laundry. (SEofes ILamifflli?y FOURTEEN ENTER ANNUAL SORORITY CHORUS CONTEST Jean Walt Directs Ivy Day Sing Competition Arrangements. Fourteen sororities have entered the inter-sorority sing contest which Is to be a part of the annual i..,. Hair cereonlcs. accordine to Breta Peterson, member of Mortar Board in charge or ivy aay ar no Arrom nts Rules of the contest will be announced later, as well as names of those who are to Judge the contest. Those who have entered are as follows: Alpha Delta Theta, Al oha Chi Omega, Alpha Omicron Pi, Alpha JFm, Aipna ai iciio, -.ui -wacra Delta. Delta Delta. Delta Gamma, Gamma Phi Beta, Kappa Alpha Theta, j"pp Kapua Kappa Gamma, Phi Mu, and Pi Beta Phi. A letter was sent to each soror ity informing them of the contest, and those groups wishing to par ticipate could sign un In Ellen Smith hall until last Tuesday. Jean Walt is tne memner or a. W. S. board In charge of arrange ments for the sing. VESPERS 10 OBSERVE Y.W.C.A. NEBRASKA IN Five Students Present Play Entitled 'The Color Line MoKmsiin-in-Chlna week, which nriii ho nhsorved in the Y. M. C. A. w ui j wu. - ... . during the coming week, will be the theme of the weekly vespers which wil lbe held Tuesday after noon at 5 o'clock in Ellen Smith hall, according to Caroline Kile, who Is chairman or me vespers staff. i Eleanor Neale. chairman or tne Nebraska-in-China staff of the Y. W., will act as presiding orricer ot Via sorvipa and will cive the de- votionals. A litany of fellowship, which is the same service that was used when the Grace Coppock placque was presented to the na tional Doara or tne i. . a. m New York City, will be held. Give Play. "The Polor Line" is the title of a play which will be presented, and which will include the follow in tr cast: Mr. Lawson. Patricia Mageer, Miss King, Rosalie Motl, Chun, Marjone Bannister, &taniey, Jane Bell, and Barbara McLean, Ethel Kruitzfield. Included on the program also will be a vocal number by Ruth Johnson and processional. "In Christ There is No East or West, and recessional by the vesper choir. Small programs, with little Chinese cut-outs, actually made in China, will be given out to those attending. "The Y. W. C. A. in China today has established not only churches. Sunday schools, and training places for religious workers, out also kindergartens, centers of so rial work, schools, colleges, hos pitals, traveling dispensaries, agri cultural stations, puDiisning nouses and social settlements," stated Miss Bernice Miller, secretary of the university Y. W. "The value or tneir worn is gen erally acknowledged." Miss Miller continued. "Miss Leila Hinkley is the Y. W. C. A. representative in China today. Our desire to help continue such a work thru her needs no explanation." "The purpose of the Vespers is to acquaint members of the Y. W. with our work in China," accord ing to Miss Kile. "Many people do not know anything of what tha Y. VV. is donig outside of the lo cal field." GEOLOGY STUDESTS LEAVE FOR DAKOTA E. F. Schramm Accom panies Party to Black Hills Mines. Several students in the geology department expect to go to the Black Hills this weekend for an in spection trip. They will study the geological formations and visit the mines of that region, tuning tneir tour tbey plan to stop at Keystone, S. Dak., the Homestake gold mine at Lead, and the Badlands country. They will also pay a visit to the South Dakota school of mines. Prof. E. F. Schramm, chairman of the department of geology, will ac company the itudents. CLASSIFIED ADVERISEMENTS Clatilfled Ar Cash 10c PER LINE Minimum of t Lints LOST Envelope containing v;lub1,'! non-nerotmble puperi. xtewaru. TK73 or M2355. . LOST Alpha Phi pin. Flnrtr pleaae call Helen MCMOiriea, emm. April 8-14 1124 L CHINA WEEK TUESDAY 15 . ''V -:At. . f