The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 06, 1935, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Nebraskan
HIT"
E
Official Student Newspaper of the University of Nebraska
VOL. XXXV NO. 36.
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1935.
PRICE 5 CENTS
CAMPUS
RALLIES
FOR LAST BIG SIX
GRID FRAY FRIDAY
'Kan Kansas' Watchword
For Turf Mix
Saturday.
ASSEMBLE AT TEMPLE
Schulte, Fischer, Scherer
To Speak Outside
Staduim.
Kan Kansas' is the Uni
versity of Nebraska campus
watchword as th Cornhuskers
prepare tor their Big Six titular
football match with Kansas'
Jayhawks here Saturday.
Students will give their team a
spirited sendoff into the last con
ference fray of the season with a
rally parade Friday night
The usual order of march will
be followed, the crowd assembling
at Temple theater, marching down
"R" Street to 16th and north on
Vine to the stadium where Coach
Henry F. Schulte, Daily Nebraskan
Editor Jack Fischer and Game
Captain Bernard Scherer will
speak. Speeches will be made out
side the stadium main gate, not in
dors as heretofore.
No Car Wanted.
Band, Corn Cobs, Tassels, Inno
cents and students will form in
the parade in the order named.
Students are requested by mem
bers of the Student Rally Com
mittee, in charge of the demon
stration, to refrain from joining
the parade in cars and to stay off
the running boards of machines
transporting the cher leaders.
"We realize it is cold, but think
that the students can generate
more pep afoot than in cars,"
stated Arnold Levin, member of
the rally committee. "We want
to make this one of the biggest ral
lies of the year, for Saturday's
game will decide the winner of the
Big Six football championship for
1935. So everybody please stay
out of cars and help us put on a
demonstration that will scare
Kansas."
"The entire band must be pres
ent," said Fred Chambers, Inno
cent and chairman of the rally
committee. "This rally necessi
tates the presence of as large a
number of musicians as possible,
and we request all to turn out."
Plans for Plantation Party
Will Be Discussed at
Mass Meeting.
Coed Counselors will hold a
mass meeting Thursday, Nov. 7,
at Ellen Smith hall, to distribute
tickets for the Plantation Party
to be given by the group Nov. 34.
Arrangements will also be made to
co-operate with Alpha Lambda
Delta, freshman women's honor
ary, in helping freshmen women
with their school work.
"Since this is an annual party
the board members urge that
every Coed Counselor feels it her
responsibility to attend the Thurs-,
day meeting. General plans for
the affair will be discussed, and
tickets will be given out," stated
Elizabeth Moomaw, president of
the organization.
Each coed counselor will bring
her little sister to the party, and
fraternity mothers and daughters
are especially invited. Elizabeth
Moomaw is In charge of general
arrangements, with Marjorie Ban
nister chairman of the program
committee, Gladys Klopp in charge
of the food, and Rowena Swenson,
responsible for getting waitresses.
WPA PlEISlRT
$70,000 Government Aid for
Omaha Construction to
Be Employed.
Government aid for new univer
sity building project on the Om
aha medical school campus will
put $70,000 worth of material and
labor Into use Thursday, when the
first shift of unemployed work
men go on duty.
New stram tunnels for the beat
ing plant, a new service building,
and a gown factory are included
in the list of projects to be under
taken by the WPA. All money
grants will be from the govern
ment; some building materials on
hand and the services of building
supervisors is being contributed by
the university.
The project were formally ap
proved last week, and prelimi
naries were qluckly disposed with
to provide fork for Omaha job
leas, who were further endangered
by the sudden cold snap. Th
gown-making project, which will
employ Omaha women, will provide
doctor's and nurses gown for the
university hospital clinic, and lb
valories. R. B. Saxon, assistant
operating superintendent, is super
vising the wot a.
Stricter Enforcement
Smoking Order Urged
Stricter enforcement of the
"No Smoking" order of the
board of regents was asked of
all Instructors In the depart
ments of economics and busi
ness organization by Dean J.
E. LeRosslgnol In a letter
mailed from his office Satur
day. Text of the letter follows:
"Wlil you please remind the
students In all of your classes
of the fact that the university
regents have issued an order in
regard to smoking which reads
as follows: 'Smoking Is prohibi
ted in the halls, classrooms,
and student laboratories of
University buildings.'
"I hope that our students, as
law-abiding citizens, will com
ply with the letter and spirit of
this order and refrain from
smoking in the places indicated.
However, I am pleased to say
that the young men of the col
lege are invited by the Men's
Commercial Club and with con
sent of the faculty to smoke in
their room.
"Please support this letter as
strongly as your conscience
may permit, so that the halls
may be free from tobacco
smoke and the floors from ci
garette stubs, which are un
sightly in themselves, cause
trouble for the janitors, and
make a bad impression on visi
tors." J. E. LeRossignol."
RF
.11
Tassels to Carry Memorial
Flag in Armistice Day
Celebration.
R. O. T. C. unit will observe
Armistice Day, Nov. 11, with a
regimental parade thru the down
town business district at 1 o'clock
it was announced Tuesday by the
military department. Tassels, car
rying the Memorial Flag, will form
in front of the Provisional battal
ion and parade with the Cadet
Regiment
At 1:15 an assembly will be held
on the mall between Social Sci
ence and Andrews hall. The band.
Tassels, Provisional Battalion, and
Brigade Headquarters will be on
the north side of the rectangle; the
First Regiment, Companies A to
M in command of Cadet Colonel
Rider, in the center, and the Sec
ond Regiment, Companies A-2 to
M-2 in command of Lt Col. Cos
grove, on the south.
Following the Armistice Day pa
rade the Regiments will reform on
the athletic field. Memorial sta
dium, where a parade rally and re
view will be held honoring the
football coaches and the squad. Ca
dets will be in full uniform, and
Field and Staff officers are to be
mounted.
The Regimental and Battalion
staffs for each Regiment are as
follows:
l int Rnrlmrnt .
Cinlone! Ridrr.
Major Chmry. Adjutant.
Lt. rirleiu. h i.
Lt. Poller, 8-3.
Ul. Peine. B-4
tint tuttolMin.
Major Ryan.
Capt. Palmer, Adjuian
nkm4 Battalion.
Majnr Akin.
Cai't. ShellrntMTK, AdJ'jtmi.
Thlra Battalion.
Major Funk.
Cuptaln Snurtleff. Adjutant.
I'ruv. Btatuiitaa.
Major O'Sulllvan.
CapLain Clark, Acjuant.
Lt. Col. CfmKrove.
Major Elliott, Adjuunt.
Lt. H. P. Schmidt, S-2.
Lt. Shutt, s-a.
Lt. Wampler. 8-4.
Plrat Battalion.
Major Hum..
Captain Black. Adjutant.
SmmS Battntlua.
Major Slandrvan
Captain BriKht.ni, Adjutant.
Third Battalion.
Major Pace.
Captain Mollkemper, Adjutant.
O MA II A COWESTIOS
HEARS DR. WHITSEY
L'ni Zoologist Lecture on
Heredity in Man
Tuesday.
"Heretity In Man" is the subject
upon which Dr. D. D. Whitney,
chairman of the zoology depart
ment, addressed members of Sig
ma Xi at a meeting held Tuesday
evening in the medical college
campus in the south ampitheater
at Omaha.
The inheritance of mental traits,
as well as a comparison of the
similarity of inheritance in plants
animals, and people, including the
possibility of inheritance was the
subject. A banquet at 6:30 pre
ceded the meeting.
Miss Moke Dicuwe New
Highway to Mexico City
Miss Irene Moke, graduate as
sistant in Georgraphy, lectured
Tuesday morning to the class in
Georgraphy of Latin America on
the subject: The New Motor
Highway to Mexico City." Miss
Moke made this trip last summer
spending much of the summer In
Mexico on field research as her
thesis in part of the work toward
her Master's degree in geography.
GHENT PLANS
OBSERVE
NOV
WITH BIG PARADE
Skit Judging Periods
Alpha PM 7:00
Alpha Omlcron PI 7:15
Kappa Alpha Theta ... 7:30
Gamma Phi Beta 7:4S
Pi Beta Phi t:00
Oeita Gamma :1S
Chi Omega i:30
Sigma Alpha leta .... 1:45
GREEKS COMPETE
FOR
DECORATION
CONTEST PLACES
Eight Fraternity, Sorority
Entries Received by
Sponsors.
SORORITIES MAY ENTER
Applications Must Be Filed
By Thursday at Daily
Nebraskan Office.
With right fraternities and
sororities having entered the
contest for the best homecom
ing decorations by Tuesday
night, Innocents, sponsors of
the projects, looked, forward to ex
tensive participation in the com
petition. Houses which have already filed
the Alpha Phi. Kappa Kappa Gam
ma, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma
Nu, Alpha Tau Omega, Delta Up
silon, Sigma Phi Epsilon, and Pi
Beta Phi.
"Both sororities and fraternities
are urged to enter the contest,"
state Jack Pace, Innocent in
charge. "There seems to be some
what of a misunderstanding that
only fraternities could take part in
the decorating. We hope that every
group on the campus will partici
pate in homecoming celebrations
in this manner."
All entries must be filed by
Thursday in the Daily Nebraskan
office. Winner of the contest will
receive a silver cup, now on dis
play in Long's Bookstore window.
A limited cost of $25 on materials
has been set by the men's honor
ary society.
The decorations will be judged
by Maurice Gordon, of the fine
arts department, Richard Ernesti,
of Miller & Paine, and Ray Ram
say; alumni secretary. Judging will
take place Friday night at 7
o'clock, and the winner will be an
nounced in Sunday's Daily Ne
braskan. Although no contest was held
last year, several houses put up
decorations as an individual proj
ect. This year, the winner, whose
name will be engraved on the cup,
shall keep the trophy for a year.
A. L Frolik Speaker at First
Such Affair of Year
On Campus.
NOV. 6 TICKET DEADLINE
Ag men will at tend a banquet
Thursday, Nov. 7, at 6 p. m. in
the Agronomy laboratory building
on the Ag college campus, which
will be the first of several this
year sponsored by the Tri K club,
active organization of agronomy
students.
Following the banquet an open
meeting will be in session during
which A, L. Frolik. instructor in
agronomy, will discuss problems in
connection with wild game man
agement Frolik is back in the de
partment of agronomy after
spending the past school year and
two summers at Wisconsin in com
pleting requirements for a doctor's
degree.
Committee in charge of tickets
and food includes Darrel Bauder,
chairman, Don Kilmer and Dale
Smith; the publicity committee is
composed of John Oymer, chair
man, Adrian Lynn and George
Lambrecht.
Officers of the club include Bob
Cushing, president, Roland Weibel,
vice president, and John Eengston,
secretary treasurer.
Tickets for the banquet must be
obtained by Wednesday evening,
Nov. 6.
14
SKIT WJIK FRIDAY
Dress Rehearsal Is Planned
For Afternoon Friday,
Nov. 22.
Fourteen winners in preliminary
Judging of skits for. the Kosmet
KJub fall review will be an
nounced Friday, according to
Clayton Schwenk. Klub president.
The judging committee mill re
view entries tonight and Thurs
day on their final rounds.
Full dress rehearsal with the or
chestra 5s planned for the four
teen fuil-time acts and curtain
skits. for Friday afternoon, Nov.
22. Several acts which are elimi
nated In the preliminary Judging
will be asked to use certain parts
of their skit for curtain acta,
which may enter competition for
I the cup with full time presenta
I tioru.
1 CIvm Second Lecture.
Dr. John D. Clark of the Bizad
college gave the second of the se
ries of lectures before Beatrice
business men Tuesday evening He '
discussed various phases of the ,
New Deal.
BANQUET FOR AG MEN
STUDENT UNION DRIVE
RENEWED BY COUNCIL
Governing Body Asks Cooperation of Alumni and
Students in Campaign to Secure for University
The Much Needed Building.
Student council efforts to obtain, a union building will bo
renewed today when Council President Irving Hill appoints a
committee to resume the drive begun last spring. Announce
ment of committee members will be made at the council meeting
at 5 o'clock today in university hall.
The new drive is to consist of O
three phases which campus leaders
hope will lead to final realization
of the project which has long been
a dream of campus governing
bodies.
The plan includes:
1. A new drive to rally alumni
support in cooperation with the
alumni association in an effort to
get definite assurance that Ne
braska alumni are willing to help
make the building a possibility.
2. Establishment of a student
union fund to which campus or
ganizations will be asked to con
triDute. In this way the council
hopes to get concrete evidence
from student groups that they are
definitely behind the proposal.
3. Investigation of possibilities
of future federal funds. The un
employment relief program will
not end this year and it may be
possible to obtain a loan next
year.
Campus leaders appeared great
ly encouraged following recent
conversations with the Board of
Regents. It was reported that uni
versity authorities were again con
sidering the project following al
most complete rejection of the plan
this spring.
"Principle objection to the plan,
was that it was not in tangible
enough form," stated Hill. "The
council hopes to be of continual
assistance to the committee by di
recting the campaign."
.10
Hayes Beall Will Speak at
Meeting at First -
Baptist.
STUDENTS PARTICIPATE
Demonstration of the vouth of
Lincoln for the cause of peace will
consist of armistice services at the
First Baptist church, 14th and K
Street at 8 o'clock, Sunday eve
ning, Nov. 10, it was announced
Tuesday by Grant McClellan, Y.
M. C. A. member in charge. The
speaker of the evening, a youth
himself, is Hayes Beall, president
of the National Council of Meth
odist Youth, coming here from the
Chicago office. He is a graduate
of the Yale school of divinity, and
was chairman last year of the
committee which sponsored the
youth strike against war.
University students representing
various organizations are cooperat
ing in sponsoring this meeting.
The student peace action commit
tee will be represented by Lilette
Jacques and Edwin Getscher; Y.
M. C. A., by McClellan; Y. W. C.
A-, by Gladys Klopp and Jane
Keefer, the latter chairman of in
ternational relations staff of the
International Relations club. All
other university students are urged
to come.
Young people's societies of the
various churches are cooperating,
and other adults groups in the city
of Lincoln are sponsoring the
meeting. Members of the Lincoln
Peace Council have actively par
ticipated in arrangements for the
meeting, and the Council itself is
sponsoring the rally. One of the
chief points of discussion Sunday
night will be the impending Nye
Kvale bill now before the national
congress. This is a proposed
amendment to section 40 of the
National Defense Act introduced
In the senate and the house on
July 24 last by Senator Nye and
Congressman Kvale. which if and
when enacted into law will "limit
its application (The Defense Act's i
in the case of civil educational in
stitutions to those offering elec
tive courses in military training."
This purpose the Nye-KvaJe
amendment would accomplish by
insetting a phrase at the appro
priate place in the present law
providing that no R. O. T. C. unit
shall be established or maintained
at any webo or college "until such
institution shall have satisfied the
Secretary of War that enrollment
in such unit (except in the case of
essentially military schools! is
elective and not compulsory."
BIBLE COSETS TO
AME U EST PLAYERS
CiHich Choone Men
To Play in Important
Football Came.
Dana X. Bible, head coach of the
Cornhusker football team, has con
sented to select, the mid western
players on the West team which
meets the Eeastern eleven in San
Francisco on New Year's day, but
he refuses to coach the Western- i
era Coach Bible has been unable
to spend Christmas at home since
his two children were born, having
been called sway by the couching
pomtinn or hy the Association
AmTican Foot bull Coaches,
of
of
which be mas ,re;iue&L
PEACE MOVEMENT
DEMONS
TRAINS
OCCUR ON NOV
WAR DEAD SERVICES
. PRECEDE K.V. CAME
14 State Legion Posts to
Share in Memorial
Event.
Impressive services in memory
of the university war dead will
precede the Kansas game, Satur
day, at the stadium, fourteen Ne
braska American Legion posts al
ready having indicated they will be
represented in massed colors. This
will be a part of the Armistice day
ceremony at the game that day.
Legion posts signifying they
will send their colors are South.
Omaha, Edgar, Decatur, Columbus,
Clay Center, Winside, Valley,
Greenwood, Lincoln, Falls City,
Beatrice, Stanton, Geneva, Sutton.
Tabulation of Cooperative
Bookstore Data to
Begin Soon.
Forty-five replies from the sixty
inquiries made have been received
by Operating Superintendent L. F.
Seaton, who is directing a nation
wide canvass of college book
stores to determine what type of
exchange would be best suited to
Nebraska.
Tabulation will start early next
week, when the final fifteen re
plies are 'expected to be Fig
ures already received are being
prepared for the tabulation sheets,
which will determine the average
cost of operation and percentage
of buying and resale prices.
Plan Submitted.
Action was taken by the ad
ministration last month when a
Student Council committee ap
peared before the university re
gents in special meeting. They de
scribed an operating plan which
embodied tie most successful
points of those systems in opera
tion at other colleges, which was
compiled from a similar survey
conducted by the Council.
According to this system, the
bookstore would purchase texts
from students for 65 percent of
their original cost, and resell them
at 75 percent. Forty per cent
would be offered for texts no
longer in use, and a special com
mittee would approve all textbook
changes proposed by instructors.
DALBY IS DELEGATE TO
E
Nebraska Sigma Delta Chi
Representative Goes for
Chapter.
Eugene Daiby. Omaha, was
elected to represent the Nebraska
chapter of Sigma Delta Chi at the
journalism fraternity's national
convention to be held Nov. 15-17 at
the University of Illinois. Urbana,
111. George Pipal, Humboldt was
chosen alternate.
Chief business before the na
tional convention will be expansion
of the alumni program to make
Sigma Delta Chi more effective in
its leadership among active news
paper and magazine men, the na
tional office announced. Conven
tion headquarters will be at the
Urbana-Lincoln hotel. Urbana.
At the convention banquet Sat
urday evening, Nov. 1?, chapter
representatives will hear two na
tionally prominent speakers. Paul
Scott Mowrer. associate editor of
the Chicago Daily News, will speak
on Tbe Foreign Situation." and
Philip Kinsley of the Chicago
Tribune will discuss "The Press
Today."
Other events scheduled for dele-
. gates include a symposium on The
Newspaper and Municipal Govern
) ment" a trip thru the plant of the
I Champaign News-Gazzette, a stag
smoker at the Champaign Country
club, and numerous convention ses
sions. Several other members of the
local Sigma Delta Chi chapter are
expected to make the trip, accord
ing to Jack Fischer, president The
Nebraska delegation will leave Lin
coln Thursday, Nov. 14. and return
Monda. Nov. 18.
At tne (.ampua Studio
Wednesday, Nov. t.
Student Council ):UO
Thursday. Nov. 7.
Cornhusker staffs (edi
torial and business). ..12:00
SEATON RECEIVES
45 REPLIES 1
BOOK EXCHANGES
Banquet Toaslmistress
r,,,.,wn. i.i, , in mi iim nu.
Courty Lincoln Journal.
Miss Charlotte Kizer.
Who presided at the Panhellenic
banquet held Tuesday night at
6:15 at the Conihusker hotel.
Tn. Plav Phonic, at Kansas
i o nay ononis ai ransas
Game; Tassels, Corn
, ui .
U0DS Oina WOrdS.
Nebiaska's new fight song, "Ne-
braska Victory," will be introduced
to homecoming alumni at the me
morial stadium Saturday, when
Billy Quick and his university R,
O. T. C. band present their new
; arrangement of it between halves
of the Jayhawker-Cornnusker con
flict according to Bill Marsh, drum
major and head of Gamma
Lambda, honorary band fraternity.
Popularly selected by the stu
dent body from a final group of
three songs, the new number, writ
ten by Mrs. Marjorie Hornberger,
received a cash prize offered by
the Innocents and Mortar Boards
societies.
Due to the time involved in
making complete ' arrangements
for the band, only the chorus will
be played at the Kansas game.
Since the words to the chorus are
brief, all students were urged to
have them memorized for the
game by Marsh.
Formal introduction of the new
song will be delayed until the
band's winter concert in Febru
ary, when a complete arrange
ment will be presented. The Tas
sels and Corn Cobs will sing with
the band at this presentation.
EXHIBIT DESCRIBES
PRIWIG METHODS
Graphic Art Department
Sonsors Morrill Hall
Dig play.
"How Prints are Made." trav
eling exhibit from the Division of
Graphic Arts of the United States
National Museum will ue on dis
play in the third floor corridor in
Morrill hall from Nov. 6 through
Nov. 30. This exhibit illustrates
and describes the following pro
cesses of printing: Wood cut, Jap
anese print wood engraving, line
engraving, photo lithography, silk
stencil printing, mezzotint, etch
ing, aquatint lithography, aqua
tone, half tone, collotype, photo
gravure, rotogravure, bank note
engraving and water color print
ng. BIDDISG OPESED FOR
AG COLLEGE PAVISG
PWA Grant Aids Building
Of Setc Outer
Drive.
New paving for the outside drive
on ag college campus will soon be
a reality. Operating Superintend
ent L. F. Seaton declared Tues
day. Bids for the construction con
tract will be received by his of
fice after Thursday, Nov. H.
NIV
RSITY BAND
INTRODUCE
NEW
EIGHT SONG
Corev Finds Definite Value
In Mental Efficiency Tests
lutclliiiij-c it-Ms, U they- mean auv tliinu ? l-A.- jjII itlj-r
coiitrovcrsial subjects liioinWrs of the university f.M-ulty Imve
their own varied opinions. Some rc firm in iWir belief lht
the general psychological tesls cnen In most of the new stu
dents lit the time they cnlereil the slate university are fair eii-
terions of the students mental"
sbility. Others, however, equally
serious, say, -It doesn't mean a
thing."
To the freshmen as a whole,
this last analysis Is probably the
more popular. One freshman
youth, when asked his opinion of
the test boldly asserted that lt
was anything but a true Indica
tion of his mental powers.
Too much physics." he said.
Another freshman coed and sev
eral of her friends, felt the same
wsy, that the tests were not fair
Indications of their intelligence,
in that most of the questions were
too "one-sided."
Cm th nthrr hand. It S. M.
, Corey, professor of educational I
SCHOLASTIC CUPS
ARE AWARDED TO
SORORITIES
Charlotte Kizer Presides at
Annual Panhellenic
Banquet.
OVER 600 ARE PRESENT
Phi Omega Pi Receives Two
Cups for First Place and
Improvement.
Highlight of the annual Panhel- '
lenic banquet held Tuesday eve
ning at the Cornhusker hotel, was
the presentation of seven scholas
tic cups to the six sororities plat
ing highest in scholarship and the
j one group making the most im
provement in the past year. Over
i six hundred sorority women wei e
I present at the banquet at which
! Miss Charlotte Kizer, president of
i the citv panhellenic presided.
1 Phi Omega Pi received two cups,
; one for the highest scholastic rat
ing, and one for making more im
provement than any other group
on the campus. Second place went
to Alpha Omicron Pi. while Adpha
Phi rated third out of eighteen
groups. Sigma Kappa placed,
; others in order being Sigma Delta
, Tau ZeU Tau Apna and Kappa
j Alpha Theta.
The program as arranged by
!Mrs. Oliver Hallam. chaiiman of
I the entertainment committee, fea-
tured a style show, with a repre-
sentative from every sorority mod
eling a formal dating from 1905 to
the present. Preceding eacn
group of models, Mrs. Harriet
Cruise Kemmer. well known Lin
coln soprano, sang a combination
of popular and semi-classical se
lections, accompanied by Harriet
Daly Ayres.
Jane Walcott, Kappa Kappa
Gamma, modeled a formal ia
vogue in 1905, followed by Eliza
beth Broady, Delta Gamma, who
wore a dress as seen in 1907. The
models for other years were: Kap
pa Alpha Theta, 1908. Katheiinfl
Shearer; Gamma Phi Beta. 1910.
Katherine Simpson: Alpha Omi
cron Pi, 1911. Marjorie Bannister;
Chi Omega, 1915. Frances Meier;
Delta Delta Delta 1920, Svsa i
Stoll; Alpha Phi. 1919. Ruth F.'it
ledge: Alpha Delta Theta, W2K
Ruth Kuehl; Kappa Delta. 1V,22.
Jean Tucker; Sigma Delta Tfj,
1923; Gwendolyn Meyersom; Pi
Beta Phi, 1926, Donnabclle Fletrii
er; Phi Mil, 1925. Donnabe'ie
Fletcher: Phi Beta Phi, 1926. Ja
nice Gould: Delta Zeta, 1927. V.'il
ma Wagner: Alpha XI Delta. 1923.
Vanita Mattise; Zeta Tau Alpha,
1929. Elizabeth Oith: Sigma Kap
pa., 1935, Barbara Maiston: Alpha
Chi Omega-Military Ball. Betty
Holland.
TO
BIG SIX CONVENTION
Miss Peterson Distributes
Bids to Kansas City
Council Meet.
Letters will be sent out today
inviting representatives from
schools in the Eig Six conference to
convene at Kansas City in Decem
ber at the time of the national con
vention, it was announced by
Marylu Petersen, Big Six commit
tee chairman Tuesday.
Original plans for a council Big
Six meeting were abandoned fol
lowing answers lrom schools indi
cating that they could not afford
to send representatives to two con
ferences and were planning to at
tend the national convention t
Kansas City. It was then decided
that midwestern schols should dis
cuss their particular problems at
the same time that schools from
all over the country were conven
ing. The purpobe of such a gathering
is so that schools having the same
type of problems can discuss them
and perhaps get new ideas.
Dsvcboloiry and measurement".
points out that while the tc-rti
may not absolutely indicate Uio
individual's intelligence, the re
sults nevertheless do give proof of
the student's ability to digest ani
understand what he read.
Two Factors.
"A poor score," says Dr. Corey,
"means the student has a rather
poor chance to succeed at any
work which requires much read
ing. This inability is due to two
factots. Either the individral has
below average intelligence or be
has suffered from inferior grade
school training."
The university faculty memiwr
(Coo'.icued on Page i)
J
u
51
!
!
!
fa"'
5-
i f
! :