PAGF FOUR THE DAILY NERRASKAN. THURSDAY, MAY 12, 193R s9 l, ' Iff BY THE HAUNTER No file engines were called for and no fire engines came, but enough water was poured in the Sig Alph windows the other night to put out the blaze in old Chicago and two or three times over. The action started when smiling Sam Francis drenched the boys on the S. A. E. lawn with a bucket of H20 thrown from a second story window. The hose was brought Into play from below and Sam and his other mermaid friend would have had a dousing if the window hadn't slammed down. Someone threw a rock through the pane of glass and the room was flooded. The big one sheltered himself with a shower curtain till a bucket was brought to drop on the hosers' hep.ds. Swish and the window was down once more and the fight was over. John Mason and Verna Ray were much embarrassed by the an nouncement of their pin hanging in this column. The two have re ceived Congrats all day from their friends and enemies, when as a nwtter of fact Johnnie is still sporting his hardware himself. We are sorry; we were led astray by Kappa gossip. Romance is in the air and this time it's Adna Dobson and Jane Bell who are rushing around to gether. Rumor has it that Dobby is the 28th victim, but don't get us wrong. We only heard. Back to the Beta house, as pre dicted, went Marie Anderson, Kite girl. We were right for once. And it's a new girl at the drug who serves cokes to the stus who drink them. The Sig Alphs must have run Irma, the old one, out for she wasn't there yesterday morn ing. Need we remind you that the Awgwan is on the stands. Truth is on the march in the gore col umns, so beware of cartoonists and candid cameras. LUTHERAN STUDENTS GIVE SPRING PICNIC ON SUNDAY Church Group Plans Annual Frolic in Pioneer Park, Meet at Temple. Lutheran students will hold their annual spring picnic Sunday afternoon in Pioneer park. Any one wishing to attend may meet the group at 2:30 at the Temple where there will be cars to provide transportation. Entertainment committee for the event are Lewis Klein, Alex Rabeler, Charles Fenster, and Harry Uhrenholdt. In charge of refreshments are Alma Glade, Ruby Hodwalker, Harold Horman, and Howard Sunderman. Yan Sant Says Free Union Movie to Show 8:30 Thursday MKht The free sound-mntion picture will be shown In the Student Union building Thursday evening at 8:30 instead of Saturday night s the Daily Nebraskan announced Wednesday, according to Union Director Kenneth Van Sant. - The full length feature Thurs day will be one of several which w ill be shown this spring in the main ballroom of the Union. BILL BARNETT I For Better Haircuts I 1017 P Got the creep J u- HERE'S THE ANSWER ARROW SHORTS Seamless crotch no center team to pull or bind. Durable fabrics. Sanforized shrunk. Broadcloth or silk. If you prefer, the Arrow knitted Guards without the fly opening. With elastic tops and In the legsSat will wear as long as the shorts. r CMP, Guards. 50c Silk.$l k-- Broadcloth .65c Mrn'i Mora 11th SI. TASMIUU J cA !RY THE HAUNTRESS Mary Fislar causing a riot in the Student U grill room by sporting an Awgwan . . . Harry Prouty tak ing a good ribbing over the cari cature of his own handsome map . . . Carl Norden, a ratheh English looking chappie . . , some of the bigger boys at the Sigma Nu shack planning to go fishing after the Gold Rush party. Maybe they'd better just be frank and admit they'll be practically swimming earlier in the evening . . . Mary Jane Dutch at the Theta house leading with her chin . . . Bob Wad hams speeding (20 miles per) in Rose Petal, the Plymouth, so named because she's so delicate and frail . . . Eleanor Lutz strut ting a brand new Thi Psi pin . , . handsome Elmer Dohrmnnn loung ing on a desk in the Rag office . . . Alpha Chi Ruth Minor and Pliny Moodie shopping for candy these days, another Alpha Chi who's singing second verse. Or maybe this is her third . . . Lois Owens simply bubbling over with enthu siasm for the gridiron dinner . . . Dale Ganz still huffy about a cer tain Delta Gamma ... a Sigma Chi senior accidentally registering for freshman lecture . . . and some one tagging your hauntress, "the problem child." Perhaps this isn't the proper time of the year to be watching the faculty too closely but Wed nesday in English Whitey Reed suggested that he'd like to have Ro.isetti write his obituary be cause he painted such beautiful pictures. "Let us picture Mr. Reed," countered Prof. Gettmann, "leaning over the bar at Heaven, his hair like ripe yellow corn." "I give up," put in Whitey blushing beautifully. Stanley Peterson, one A. T. 0. who has spent practically all of his life guzzling such harmless beverages as milk shakes, found a coke almost too much to handle one night not so very long ago at the Student U. The glass slipped, it seems, and with it six or eight ounces of coke. Stanley found the proximity of the Alpha' Tau shanty much to his advantage. And speaking of beverages, Rill Sackett and roommates could tell a tale if they would. Recently '.wo of the more prominent Innocents of '37, Web Mills and that Bern stein man, broke into the D. U. annex with a keg of unmention able which they proceeded to dump on the unususpecting sleepers. Maybe Hank Meyer could beer us out on this story. To people who have been won dering about the Barry-Rowland domestic difficulties, we assert that there are none. The absence of a Beta diamond on Betty's front is merely a matter of con venience. Betty's sorority daughter has her Alpha Chi pin, while Ihe chain At ill dangles from Jack's jeweled badge. The tubbing Mary Jane Haney, Phi Mu received last week must hive made an impression ior Monday night she ami Howard Weibel sent round the sweets and stogies. There's even a ring involved in the deal. They're getting rather clubby with their hearts and diamonds. Wade Kai-er to AvNt Idaho lYndiiiig Rifl Wade rtaser. university studfnt and Major-Adjutant in the Na tional Officers roFter in Pershing Rifles left this morning fur the University of Idaho, in Boise, Ida., to aid in th- lnstallm I new Pershing Pafle unit there. W Ji r It SOCIETY Nothing remains a secret for ever. Pris Chain, Theta, and Bucky Prime, A. T. O., were re joicing at the fact that Pris had had his pin for nigh onto a week and it had escaped the publica tions. However, it was seen and it's not in possession- of just- j friends now. It seems he got it the Tuesday before Ivy Day. That evening both houses sang over the radio, and so Pris and Bucky came home together. That was the night she put it next to her kite. It seems that Chi Phi calls their officers by letters of the al phabet, for those just elected were turned in by these titles: Dean Kadavy, alpha; Wayne Mullet, beta; Kenneth Tcich, gamma; Bill Spencer, delta; George - Nelson Lyon, epsilon; and Cecil Hallowell, zeta. Saturday night brings the Sig ma Nu Gold Rush pary once again. This party hns been a tradition since 1912. It was first started for the purpose of having an original party and has contin ued to be so. The whole house takes on the appearance of the days of '49. The decoratic - ire so complete that it tak o whole days to put them i. i re is the old fashioned r1 v '1 and bar: gambling tables and tin type pictures; photographers ask ing to take pictures, and charac ters of the old west running all over the place. Last year Adna Dobson came as a gambler, and his date, Frances Boldman, D. G., wore hooped skirts. Tommy Da vidson, brought his squaw in by the hair; Jack Simmons came as a deacon, but Louise Boyd, Kappa, failed to fall in line with her date, for she didn't come as the deacon's wife. . .definitely not. Duke Deger showed up as a prospector, with Virginia Lee. However, he didn't use her pan to look for gold. Betty Jean David son and Jack Bingenheimer were together, and also Mary Margaret Maly with Harry Haney. In fact, it looked as tho it were the days of Delta Gamma instead of '49. Pat Peterson became the second Mae West with hr sweeping skirt and fancy dress. Pat, who is a Pi Phi, was supposed to be the "Belle of '49, ' and according to reports, she really was there. Her date was Howard Fisher, who portrayed the part of a gambler, we suppose, to keep Pat in her frills and laces. At present, cou ples are worrying as to what to show up in. Maybe this will help Theta Xi fraternity recently pledged four new men: Glen Schluckcbier, Utica; Claude Teth row. Wood Lake; J. E. Liebendor fer. Pawnee City; and Arthur Lien, Fairbury. some of the poor souls. Too bad the party is closed, for it really is going to be a good one. Alpha Rigs are wishing some one would tell Bing Crosby-Rhode who is constantly using the tele phone (talking to Ruthie Yourd mostly) that she is not going steady anymore. Maybe a few more are glad to hear of this also. The Chi Phi's held their an nual alumni Reunion banquet Sat urday, in the Skvroom of the Ho tel Blackstone in Omaha. In spite of bad weather. 125 attended. An interesting address. "The Road Ahead" was given by the speaker of the evening, George A. Lee of Lincoln. mm STUDENTS MEETATBRlAKFAST Installation of Officers Takes Place Sunday Morning. Old and new cabinet members of the Hog em Williams club, Bap tist student group, will meet at a breakfast Sunday morning Ht the student house at 1440 Que st. This breakfan will be the first meeting under the direction of the new cabini't. The formal in Mallation took place May 8 at the weekly meeting of the group. Olson Heads Cabinet. Margaret Olson will replace Clarence Summers as president of the organization with Clifford Sturdevant as vice president and chairman of the program commit tee. Leola Schaprr will nerve as secretary and iJarrell Turner as treasurer. Committee chairmen se lected are devotional. Wane Kim sey; membership, Ksther Htuer mer; social, Mary Ellen Mill"T and Ben Oraham: program, Clif ford and Clinton Sturdevant. Ji-n-nie Neill and Fred Manns; pianist, Margaret Uicksnn. MUSIC WOrPRESEMTS 30TH CONVOCATION TODAY Misses Tookey, Kennedy Give Junior Piano, Violin Recital in Temple. i ' The 30th, mimical convocation of the school of music Is being held ithis afternoon at 4 o'clock in the ! Temple theater. features of the junior recital will lie several piano solos by Vir ginia Tookey, and a violin solo by Carolyn Kennedy. Terry IJeach will be at the piano for Mian Kennedy. The advanced student recital was held in the Temple theater yesterday afternoon. A large crowd made up of students and the gen eral public attended the recital. L. H. .Smith to AiMreM Sipnu (famma Kpnloii Hi! Faciuii at 11:00 Sigma Gamma Epsiluii, honor ary geology frHtermty. will hold an o n limine this evening at 8:00 in Morrill hall. Professor L. 1J. Knilth. director of the department of architecture, will speak In room 20 of the building. The fraternity Invites all who wish to sUend. A ""Legion of Beauty" 600 strong Invaded the Colgate university men only campus for the annual Junior prom. the y' The Women's National Radio committee at its fourth annual luncheon meeting last week announced- that its members had voted in favor of a single award to "splendid achievement in radio" for 1937. This award went to George V. Denny, jr., and "America's Town Meeting of the Air," a National Broadcasting Company feature. Although confining itself to this one selection, the committee com nicmled a number of other broad casts in various classifications without the formality of making presentations or awards. The following were some of the favorites published: Best programs of serious music commercially sponsored: Ford Sunday evening hour, Philadelphia orchestra cancerts, "Musical Star" programs and Metropolitan Opera broadcasts. The first is a CBS program, the others, NBC broadcasts. Best Dramatic programs: Lux radio theatre and Columbia Workshop, both CBS features. Best serial program: One Man's Family, NBC program. Best Variety program: Good news of 1938, Rudy Vallee, both NBC. Best adult educational pro grams: "America's Town Meet ing of the Air, NBC; and Pro fessor Quiz, CBS. Best Radio Comedians: Charlie McCarthy, and Fred Allen, both NBC. Outstanding comedy team: Jack Benny and Mary Living stone first, Amos and Andy sec ond, Burns and Allen third. All are NBC performers. Most popular master of cere monies: Don Ameche, first; Robert Taylor, second. Both NBC. Good taste in Advertising: First place to Jell-O, on NBC, Second to DuPont's "Cavalcade of America" on CBS. If she remembers a tune while digging in her garden or having her hair waved, it's a sure sign to Connie Boswell that the song, whether she likes it or not, is going to be a hit. All it has to do is "repeat" in her mind. Acting on these hunches, the warm voiced girl from the deep south, singing star on the CBS Monday night Show has shown uncanny ability to pick winners in the popular song sweepstakes. "I do recordings at least four months in advance." she says, in explaining how she manages to be so lucky in picking hits. "I hear these new songs, work them over on the piano, and if they keep coming back when I'm doing things I like to do, I know I have something."' Her all time "high" in pick ing successes occurred recently when out of eight songs, sub mitted, she picked seven that turned out to be hits. But "Martha" the newest Boswell craze, she picked for "Swing ing,' because she adored the Caruso records of the opera as a child. Connie, once just one of the trio of the famous Boswell sisters, which included Martha and Vet, is definitely "on her own" now in the entertainment field. Again she is demonstrating that spark of originality in modern music whicn brought to her and her sisters fame and wealth. She Is one of the few feminine stars who talks the way she sings. She speaks with a deep tone and her words have a haunting timber. Chatter. . .Dorothy Lam our threatens to bob her brown hair, as long hair hardly sefms worth the tune and trouble. . .her friends aren't worried as she's said that before. . .Bing Crosby is gathering fishing tackle to go after trout on his mountain ranch when the sea son opens... Bing celebrated his 34th birthday May 2. Tyrone Pow er will be starred next with Lor etta Young and AiiaU-lla in a 2 million dolalr picture, "Suez.". . . Don Amcchc and Jack Bennv are vacationing together between broadcasts on a dewrt ranch near Palm Springs. . .Marion Tallcy ha taken to raising orchids. . .which take seven years to go from seed to blossom .. .Fannie Brice is still stunned from news that one oak tree transplanted on grounds of her new home In Beverly Hills wil! cost her $7W). Today's Katlio Highlights: kHH i. in. Hill Mllk-r, n Kari4. i. Bi. Marqurllr hlik M'IhmiI bant. A:IA i. m. MwHkr i artrr. ll i. m Uc tlw rn,)4r. :m p. en. Kalr Mritlh. 1 : p. in Mar rhmiV tnulrw Hilar. Sll p. m. AitM-rlrana al Work. frlMI t. m. Jiial r.nlrriainrrMrit. :IA p. m MiiIUmm fMTrnarM.iM. II:IMI i. m. Iiimm llnrary'a wrrhralra. HI: Ha p. m. Hmy Klni'a arrbralra. II:M p. m. MIHh- Krtam'a nrwalra. I mo a 1 It:! p. m. kaalrrrl llnOri-n. I :Sa a, m llarnM hliikr'a rrrw-alra. 1:411 i. In. a. . t. 4rfii bait. :l p. m. II..II)h1 Hiahhanla. j Mill. lt:MI m. HlrrH Ki-imrtrr. 4 ail p. ,. Nrt, . hikiMrf III Mtlak. 4:HA ii. ni, 'I ana Iwlalrra. I H-.m p. m. Marrk ( lin. j I:H n. m. Hub 4 r.li'a nrrhi-atra. II:IMI n. rtl. Jan 4,arlMra Mrrnralra. I J :3Mt i Tn . Anwin lr-lia' rrbalra. Connecticut State college coeds successfully protested the impos ing o five cent fines for holes made in walls of their dormitory rooma. More than thirty religious de nomlntional groups are represented In the Whcaton college student lioily. GET FREF THEATER TICKETS AT HOLMS OAS STATION Whit Gat 15' , Laad4 Brenra 17' e 4) Kinl.Kno'k Ethyl 1',s HOLM'S OIL CO. 14th I W Expedition to Navajo Area Seeks TVo Nebraska Men Scientists to Map Indian Territory, Explore - ' Utah Canyons. Two University of Nebraska men may be elected to join the expedition for the exploration of the northern Navajo country in Ariaona and Utf.h this summer. The men may be students or in structors ant. should be interested in engineering, archeology, ge ology in the biological sciences, or in the management of a scien tific expedition, it was announced today at the Explorers" club by Dr. Charles Del Norte Winning, field director of the Rainbow Bridge, Monument Valley expedi tion. The expedition is to explore, map, and study an area of some 2,000 square miles in a remote region that Is probably farther from a railroad than any other point in the United States. Pene trating as far as possible by mo tor, the field party will then move equipment by pack train up wind ing canyons out into Rainbow plateau. Near the head of the Dogoszhi Biko, a base camp will be established, and from this point scouting parties and scientific workers will push on afoot. Engineers Map Canyons. Ansel Franklin Hall, president, the American Exploration society, under whose direction the expedi tion is organized, states: "We have already begun our explorations in that fascinating country of mesas, canyons, and deserts, but have as yet covered only a small portion of the area. About the middle of June we are going back to take up the task of pushing out as far as possible into FIRST MATINEE DANCE THRONG OF Van Sant Urges Students Attend Hops to Mix, Not to Date. Student Union officials were greatly pleased with a turnout of over 500 students at the matinee dance held yesterday in the Union ballroom. Records were played, with the most popular hit tunes used for dance music. Director Kenneth Van Sant emphasized however, that "the purpose of these mati- nee dances is to let everyone gci acquainted with everyone else. We do not stage these matinee j dances especially for those who ! make dates and come to dance, but rather for the entire student body. Everyone should come, date or no date, and get acquainted. A big stag line and a lot of cutting is perfectly all right with us." i Saturday afternoon from 3:30 j to 5:30 another matinee dance j will be held with the recording : machine providing the dance mu sic. This evening at 8:30, in the ballroom, moving pictures will be j shown free to all who wish to at tend. SIGMA DELTA CHI, THETA SIGMA PHI SATIRI E CAMPUS (Continued from Page 1.) "Love, anl What I think of the American Technique." Ramsay will consider the same subject from the Mexican angle, "A Study in Brown.'' George Binger, voluble Sigma Chi, has been hecured by the Sea ton, Gunderson and Selleck Shows, inc., to act as barker and ringmas ter for the affair, while, clowns and a vendor will lend atmosphere. Adna Dobson as Biff Jones, and Johnny Howell and Sam Francis las members of the coaching staff will explain the new technique which the Huskers. or rather the members of the Cornhusker Grid iron Debating society, will use ! 'h,,n they argue igainst the Golden Gophers of Minnesota next fall on : tie sunjcci, ncsoivea: That there is no place like Nebraska." Other akits will poke fun at the write f.pot campaign and various campus activities. Morris Lipp, taking the part of Prof. R. P. ' Crawford of "I think for myself fame." will show in successive i stages the manufacture and emcr- gence or the Idea Karah Louise Meyer, cx-columnist for the Dally Nebraskan, impersonating "Little Egypt" will guide Baby Snooks in her quest for life Hnd love. Over 300 persons arc expected to attend the banquet in the fclu dent Union Friday, according to Bruce Campbell, chairman of the iiroirram committee. Tickets for the banquet, which will begin at 6 p. rn. in the ballroom, fire priced at $1 and may be obtained from members nf Sigma Delta Chi or Theta Sigma Phi. Armour Home Keonomift Addressee To (Hansen Miss Esther Latzke, home econ omist from Armour and Co., spuke rx-fore two classes in Institution administration yesterday. Noted for her newspaper work and re search work with meats, Mish I.atr.ke talked on "Experimental Work In Meals and "Opportum ties In Business for the Home Economics Trained Woman." Miss Latzke writes under the pen name of Marie Gifford in newspapers and magazines. F0R5AUDS ' THAT PLEASE is r vi i M A a 1 II A Creamed i COTTAGE CHEESE rf the 2,000 or more square miles that lie beyond our present hor izons. Engineers will map intric ately carved canyons, and will re cord the location of cliff dwellings and other evidence of pre-historic peoples reported by the archeolo gical field parties. Extensive exca vation will be completed in the Tsegi canyon. The botanists will concentrate upon a study of the richly forested summit of Navajo mountain." Seek Rare Animals. Biologists under the leadership of Dr. Angus Woodbury, of the University of Utah, will seek rare mammals, birds, reptiles, and fish in the deep canyons of the San Juan and Colorado rivers. Other members of the staff will be Prof. Ralph L. Beals, depart ment of anthropology, University of California: Lyndon' L. Hargrave of the Museum of Northern Ari zona, archaeologist; Prof. George Brainerd, Ohio State university; John Wetherill, rustodian of Navajo National Monument for the National Park Service, will be associate field director. The exhibition operates under a board of trustees, as a co-operative project, each man shnring in the work, and the field expenses. The two men will be chosen by Dr. Winning some time during the next two weeks; meanwhile he will receive applications sent to him at the Explorers club, New York City. Applications may also be sent to Prof. Fay-Cooper Cole, University of Chicago or to Prof. Ralph L, Beals, University of California. The remainder of the party will be made up of men from Princeton. Harvard, Chicago, Stanford, University of California, and several other large universities. INSURANCE MAN SPEAKS BEFORE DELTA SIGMA PI Loder Discusses Advantages Of Professional Type Of Fraternity. Merle Loder, district manager for the Mutual Life Insurance company of New York, spoke last night on the "Advantages of a Professional Fraternity" before a group of Delta Sigma Pi members who were holding a banquet in the Student Union building. Six new members were initiated that aft ernoon. Received into the international professional commerce fraternity I were Chester Hickman, Broken Bow; Dean Irvin, Bennet: Tom Noble, Shenandoah; Kenneth Eg gers, Princeton: George Hawkes. Omaha, and Orlyne McCartney, Lincoln. Guest at the banquet was Henry Lucus, Nebraska alumnus, who is province director of the fraternity. The University of West Virginia glee club produced Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet" with men in all roles. & 0 rvHircnr?ri r-v U - ill i R" TO THE ELECTRICAL QUIZ m The installation of marine reduction-gears on the U. S. S. "Neptune," a naval collier, marked the beginning of such propuliion for large vrsteli. Thit installation was made by Wettinghouse in 1912. 2. Three kinds of heat are supplied by the "Corox" surface units of a Westinghouse electric range radiated heat, conducted heat, and converted heat 3. George WestinKhouse introduced the Parsons steam turbine to the U. S. in 1899, and built the first com mercial turbine generator units. 4. The seven major types of rectifiers are: (1) Hot cathode, vacuum, (2) Hot-cathode, gasfillcd; !3) Dissimilar electrodes: 14) Mercury arc; (5) Electro lytic; 6) Dry electronic; nd '7) Mechanical. 5e HEUSLER, an alloy of copper, manganrse and alu minum, none of which is ferromagnetic, is itself ferromagnetic. ge The electrified portions of the Pennsylvania Railroad ute 11,000 volt alternating current, pioneered by Westinghouse. 7 Westinghouse Station KFKX. at Hastings, Neb., was the world's first commercial "repeating" broad cuting station. JJe The electrification in 1905, by Wettinghouse, of the main rolls at the Edgar Thomson Works of the Cirnrgic Steel Company w.is the first of its kind to lie accomplished. 9 The Westinghouse lighting of the World's Columbian Esposition, held at Chicago in 1893, was the first large-scale display of incandescent lighting ever seen. 10. sterilamp is a tubular glass lamp containing inert gas and mercury vapor which emits ultra violet rays lethal to bacteria when it it excited by an electric discharge. It wat developed in the Wettinghouse Lamp Division laboratories at Bloomficld, N. J. This complctet the terict of "Electrical Quit" quttirins and answers which have been published by Westinghouse to create a broader interest in electricity among college students. NOTE: Our attention bat been called to an editorial slip in our first "Electrical Quit." The elevators in Radio City travel at a tpeed of 1400 feet per minuf not, of course, MOO feet per second, a erroneously stated. Westinghouse Electric ts Mfg. Co. Pittsburgh, Pa. Westingliouse Women Make Preparations To Aid Freshmen Girls Of Next Year. One hundred newly elected Coed Counselors met at a mass assem bly of the organization yesterday afternoon at 5 o'clock in Ellen Smith hall to begin preparations for the orientation of .freshmen women next year. Virginia Fleetwood, president of the Coed Counselor board, pre sided at the meeting and described the purpose and activities of the organization. Following the gen eral meeting, the Counselors di vided into their separate groups under individual board members and discussed group projects. First work of the Counselors will be to write more than 600 letters to girls who will be fresh men here next year, describing the campus and the big sister organi zation. Copies of the letters to the freshmen women which are be ing written by the Coed Counsel ors must be submitted to Miss Piper before 5 o'clock, Friday. Projects which the groups will manage next fall will be informa tion booths during registration and the first few days of school, the giving out of buttons to fresh man girls, ushering at the fresh man convocation, and assisting at registration. Miss H. Alice Howell leaves for New York; To Visit May Pershing Miss Alice Howell, head of ..he speech department, leaves Thurs day for a trip to the east where she will remain for the remainder of the semester. She is going to Millsbrook, N. Y., to review some plays and from there plans to go to New York City to visit Dr. Elizabeth Williamson, formerly of the Uni versity of Nebraska. From there she hopes to go to Washington, D. C, to visit Miss May Pershing. "There seems to be a new tend ency to hold fairs with increasing frequency as a means of celebrat ing national or local historical events. It is safe to assume that the need for experts in this field possessed of specialized training, knowledge and experience will be increasingly great." So. an nounces Hunter college's Prof. Brodenck Cohen, his institution, will inaugurate a course in inter- (Classified ADVERTISING -10icraUNE LOFT: ard. Alpha Th' Orwa Tin. Georffptta Kiinaev, T21S6. Re- UU Mil