omm vi"-"".‘ .‘Co2ich Ready‘.:To Edirsajnnuai C0tlfEGl;”ALTERS* is "_'T07Pl.llY‘TWlCET, ollegc*-'-Portico Will Be! ’i‘ra‘iisforine(l Into Gar- den, Palace, at Play’, ‘H, e1p*Bb.0lf liflsh Students who have been’ -left behind in .the"rugby rush for reserve bboksmay yet win their goal,‘ it a plan volunteered by out._ ~ . , . .“I will be glad to help stu- dents getbooks in the '4 p. in." library line," the coach‘ said’ yesterday, “if they feel that" they are losing good positions ‘through, a poor start.’ A half‘ 'lio,ur.’s_.daily workout on the track would improve any awk- ward contestant. “Moreover, I will provide the cartridges used—in training." the coach offered. “Though I doubt- ,if the library squad will reveal any distance runners, I may un- cover.-a few pro‘mlsing'sprinters' and ‘a -good 440 man-or woman-."._. , " - ' Depicting Olivia's palace,. a niiul garden, and it street scene, he fror\‘t_port_lco of the college'is be divided into a three-tier age’ for the State college pro- action of Shakespeare's .“Twelfth iglit""und‘e'r the direction of lgull -and Dagger on Wednesday, fid 'I‘hursday_evenings,' June, 15- ml 10. , _ ' “Twelfth Night” is one of the ost delightful of Shi'ikes'peare's oniedies, as the ‘plot is simple, di- et't!'_l1n(.l, interesting, blending eiiutyof lines_.’ with humorous imi~ucterization.j-'_ In keeping with he lyrical "and. dramatic beauty of he play, there will be a setting of Eliznbethian melodies, ar- inged by Miss Deborah, Smith‘ of- he music‘ department. ‘ ‘ ._.___ ~ . Before and after the play there,‘ Ml” Nellie F°5‘°"v».‘Vv'-‘° '5 .“°“: ‘ill be 3 “lj-"“‘tet °f_3l’«1'°“l"lI sins- doing soclal.work in the city, will '5' °°mp"5°d °f'M'5s L°“ Beme offer’ on’ introductory course in eyner.'29, ‘and Miss Dorothy . . - . _ ml .27’ Frnncifi Wham“, :29. andysocial work during the first sum- ymn Monroe '29, wh;1°,du,~;,,¢mer session which will include ii he scenes incidental music will be brief study of the history of the “'0” by ‘Mills Mm‘)? Lime" .77: social reformimovement, the -.prc's'- ‘ioiinist; Miss Mary Andrews, flut-‘em field of social work -and the st, and ‘Ross White '29, 'cellist.l rind ‘es underlying ' médepn '"ld° F"""'“3°" is t° be we .5—°'°" llreatirlent in social service 1 st for the songs within the play._ . . i k’. r 'MiS5-‘Sybil Em“ J°"°S' he‘-‘d °f UlI‘0l¢‘d"ii;‘gtli0S’(l3‘:i.ili:l'i"i‘i{ogx"tlldsblsllil: . A ‘h. ,1 pp y’ u 5 eve -w n’ Those eligible-,to the "class in- L me “C um of Twelfth Night iclude upper division students who »h,a've_ had courses in,-sociology, psy- chology, economics and anthro- pology; students wlio are -consi- dering social work as a profession; church workers- teachers~ social iworkers now" cinployed who have not had training orzwho.-;wish~fur— ther-‘training,.and other mature ‘interested persons. V '“ Field tripsiflto local_,social agen- cies v and ins itutions will be ar- f ranged, and opportunity for prac- iss Gladys Hitt to §.'.°..°.;i.'.§’."f.:‘" .‘i.1.."’£-’i.i"..'.".°" M """"‘7’d Head Associatibn Membership .in,this. class is ‘ limited to twenty-five, and consent ‘of the instructor is necessary. in all cases. ' ~ _ , i_- .Two units of credit or "three ‘units to those doing practicez i_vork_ Social Work ‘Course Offered in Summer =- o _ =- r: uetion, having stu'died direction nder Garnet‘ Holme,"'fo1-mgr tage director of the’Shakespe_ar.- on Memorial theater at Stratford- n-Avon. ' Working under Miss Jones‘ are liss Elsie Moriarty as_art direc- or and _Miss Rosalie Moore '29, costumer. ’ i ’ " With a complimentary. vote o_f| 27,kMis1s Gladys Hitt '29; was last ee e ected president of" the W ' Athi ti ' ' ' . A bnmfhc §::c';E,?tn' hrglwill be given_ for the course. served» as V;ce.p,.e5;dent of the as”, Miss Foster will be in_the office ioeiation,.in charge of ‘publicity °f “'9 den" °f~'W'°me£1‘dni1’Y?fr°m work, and was chairman of the 2 lo 3‘“"d at °t-ll" “mm by "9' mlly committee in April. P°'""“°“‘ °l"3'v *° °°“‘°*‘ with other n W ff. «' M; ._I- ,studcnts who are interested in the Co I ,2; ,° '°°‘3§d’“'° '39 V“ course, and alsg__with, those mem- I ';l'fM,,' V'°°'p"°“ Gift» “'h°’d°‘,bers of the class who wish to do ea ei iss Mary '_AtkinB0n. 29: field work with local societies. 182-87; and. Miss Helen Mark, '30,; __ . , , ' , secretary, who won from Miss La 0 o Rue Fry '29, by a vote'of 162-109. ihlhrary-‘Win A revote'on_the treasuryship will .. Shakespeare be taken today, since none of the . _.' »- ' three candidates reccived’a major} _A Shakespearian exhibit in,con- '!"'g The °°“"l5 3t°°d Ml“ Glfldyfiinection with the production of smith .29, 103; Miss Lenmpeter-Iinrwelfth ,Night'yy Skull and Dug“ vCoach_‘C. E. Peterson is carried ’ ~ will Dana i..-ri.omp-on-'2or<£.i;. . ' tor of_'D‘ol'.Sudoe|to, the col-. . Jag: nnnualf ' ]iii‘iio'i~1'C_ol._lcge Work‘ Will- ‘ Be 'Classe(l I_‘.owe'r Division; to. E-xpniitl, ' Development of administrative functlons_.ne_ce_ss_itated by the growth "of the college, has resulted in, the’ appointment, of Irving E. Outcalt, head of the English" de- partment, and heretofore acting vice-president of the college as ‘M offioio dean of the faculty. with Arthur G. Peterson as dean'of lib- eral arts, and cX:_O{f_lC'lQ__(l_(_.'l1n of - men, and Dr. \Villis- . Johnson as dean of'education. , ‘- Dean Peterson will have particu- “ lar” change" of" th‘e'"'iower-- divisiorr with respect to the general guid- ance of students, while guidance ofupper divi ailministered partmental organization outlined below. ‘ ' Sudo_e_ste Debut -1 Arouses ltlrl. Coldwellhbcan I (Mrs. Ada Hughes Coldwell will remain the dean‘of- women, and J. W;"Anlt will-continue as principal Greeting the college one day early, the fourth. annual_DelkSii-_ doeste has brought forth vigorous _ vice-preside‘nt'.‘lJy"title, and 'éx.- ‘ sion students will be; hrough.the new dedtors were asked to number the de- EaitTriaI§Nafu’s*Ra7."k*Hz ‘With *Re_ddé State college students and facul- tymrefer the‘ edltorialjcolumns of The Aztec to otherndcpartments, if the results, of a questionnaire answered ,by fifty-eight persons last .week are reliable. ' News ranked second choice, the Saint ‘James column was -third, sports fourth, ,the ‘literary department fifth, society sixth, ‘Lobby_Loafer seventh, and Other Campuses, the the nei_ve_st department, last. ' In response to the query, “Do you favor the use of ‘much or little society news?" thirty persons ad- voted for the present amount; and thirteen asked‘ for an‘, inlcrease. “Damn little" was a man's request. ——;;'I‘he»—questionnaires -were'».-distri'- butcd by members of the staff last Wednesday and Thursday.‘ Questioned students and instruc- piirtm'é'n"t‘§ in the order of .their preference, and to rate them good, fair, or poor. For quality, the news,‘§p"rTrts, lit- erary, editorlal, and Saintdames departments "w e r e- ' pronounced good by‘the’majority'of voters.""A of the training school.‘ ‘ Since the collegiate. education situation in California _is' to ', be carefully stu_dicd__ for the next two years-by a comifii§sion"to~ be ap- pointed -by Governor Young, iiMi Hi St"d'28. . . . . SQ dIndi?,du§1e:ict,;l;, aye M, im'_ cooperation with State‘ Superinten- provement over group” photos, commcnted..Miss Dorothy Hall '27. “The book is remarkable for its thorough treatment of detail, and‘ . _ , distinctive ‘for its art work." was In zwosbteffm ’“ H v . the opinion of Mitchel Saadi '81-.‘ b3 -“d‘ '13" age cw.‘ igtcetlwes And so ondown the corridors. O c n "3 -purlmse mg l u '°“' “The veditor and, staff of ‘Del Sudoeste are to be v'congratulat_ed on an‘ achievement in beniitiful publishing,”_ said Alexander Cros- by '28. _ . This edition is ‘the twenty-f_if_th college annual, and the fourth un-. der‘ the name Del_.Sudoest"e. New Faculty Bodies . Age Appointed Here ' approval -from -its readers. Dana Thompson '29, edited the maga- zine. ' i . ' “The originality of" the poems and" humor merits reproduction," ’ent'_ administrative arrangement period with a possibility-of change lege work.will be henceforth "des- ignated as lower division. This, however, will necessitate .no change in junior college arrange- ments’ .According to present plansfilower division work will be expanded in order to offer’ more courses in the history, engineering, science, mathematics, and modern language departments. ' V More Higher Work * Since the course for the certifi- cation of teachers for the elemen- t,aijy_school,‘ has. been increased from two and one-half to three years, and since the ‘revised de- gree curriculum (A. E. major in education) -requires upper division courses in the field of liberal arts, every effort will be made by the officers and--‘faculty of. the col- lege to offer. as many upper divi- sion courses, .both professional and ‘non-professional, as possible. Though some of the depart- ments have not enbifgh m'eml$ers_ to be considered as such,-- a de- partmcntal organization has been wo‘rk“ed out for the year 1027-28 To consider the possibilities 01. improved developments _wli-hln the college in matters of instruction, :1 new coinmittee,,to be designated as the committee on the development o£'the..college, was DDP9,ln‘.°d ms" week ut the faculty meeting by thevcommittce.on.commlttc.es.: ‘ ' The ‘report réeommended~ also appointmentof f_a_culty membersto ten additional committees, the ex- ecutive groups reniaininglto be elected_in, the fa1l.1The committees serve throughout the year -1927-1928.’ . , 1 , The membcrswho will comprise» |Lbbby Loafer, and Other Cam- ipictures were made, and three rc- ‘l dent Wm. John Cooper, the pres-' will last during -the transitional, beginning nexiimonth, junior col-, . bly of the year. the committee. on college develop-I merit are President Hardy, _J. W, Ault, Mrs. Gertrude Sumption Bell: Miss Mary Benton, Miss Vinnie B. Clark, Dr.’ Myrtle Johnson. Dr. Gertrude"Laws, Charles B. Leon- ard, George it. Livingston, William- 'un(ler_- twenty-one heads. Depart- ments and heads are to be as fol; lows: Anthropology, E.'.L._Hewett; agriculture and nature study, W. '1‘. .Skiiling; botany, G. V..Coy;_ ics, A. G. Peterson; education, W. él10~—[!_1i5i’.l‘y,-L’. F. Pierce; econom- ‘ Best '30, 01. , , . "Retiring offigcrs of.the associa- Hun '30. 104; and Miss Pauline ' ger drama production, will be ex- hibited in the" library next week n_ ,sc,,dd°,.' ,,,,d 1.~,.,,,,;;1;,,_ -'i)_ L..Nida, Di‘. Leo. I~'.'l"l0"i:c. Cliiirles by Mrs. Charlotte ‘ G. Robinson, tion are l.\iiss_S_i_i_eWolferv-:28, pr'esi_-Vi llbi-m«im__1.,v . ., , _ em.‘ Mm’ <;"'“'y§ Hm‘ 29-“':.°°' - Persons~having_ai-ticles of in- W9-5"l°“ti Ml“ 19108039 L099!‘ 29» terest to add to‘ the collection are "'“""°t‘1“Yil\“d M155 _I__Y_fl_g§Ppl0 .'2_9i requested to confer with Mrs. '“'"5“|_'0l‘-_ - ' Robinson. - . v History ..S}io'i.izs ‘Need, For A" A '_A',r'mi_ani e_:fit§‘_-Di‘. Leonard win; i‘.l10yTl1ild0'li’.' plaln_to ,tj_o‘Gm-. mans that»the,~\var vVas- hopelessly lost." .y .- The speaker‘ advocated a better navy, and an armyLof?at least 200,- 000,, so ’trilinod and orgnnized as to be_ ready for indefinite expan- Usiiig historical proof to support his stand thiit the United States ins men, been threatened with ruin lieciiuse of inadcquate'military pro- leg-tion, Charlcsb. Leonard of the liistory department, gave an em- \\ ulker. - «('onsiderii!i-‘-n or the rei.ici9ii -) the college to thecotmuiiiilty, with ii vieW‘t0\V'l|1'(l is euiniiion'»u_i_~.di-r- standing, will be the fun:-tion.of ii‘ ‘committee on studcntliody rela- tions, 3’f"wliich Mlss"Flore_nce ‘L, Smith is the chairman. - ‘ E. Johnson; engineering. S. ‘ L. Stovall; English, I. E- Outcalt; fine..arts,, _M.,_L. Benton; foreign language, L. P. Brown; geography, V..B. _Clark; history, ‘C. B. -Leon. ard; industrial arts, C. R. Scud- der; luime.econqmics, M‘. E. ‘Lan-. ders; mathematics, G. R. Livings- ton; music, F. Beidlenian; physical education foi:_1ncn.' C. E: Peter- son; physical education for women, The other committees ‘\[:[)0lili.e(l and the chairmen are: adhiizisioia, Miss Mabel M. Richards; scholar- ship and standing, Mg. Leonard: assembly, Miss Georgia C. Amsden; faculty socialgaffairs, Missclark; studént publications, Le\vis 8. Les- ley; library, Irving E. Outcult; J. R. Tanner; -physics, 0. ._\’ll. Bhird ;‘ psychology, _(_l,_S__.,__,B,ell,. and M. E. Jolihsonas head of the zool- ogy department.. ‘ ' " .- l~CALEND‘AR’”f : grade of fair was’ given to society, puses. 7 _ More _Cuu Asked Twenty-o_ne demands for more uests for cartoons .wcre listed. *Moro‘ -startling \-headlines were asked by several, ‘and , more 'womcn's sports and feiver adver- tisenientswere other desires. One student warned that the editorials were often too radical. ' Further’ information_ on- the Athletes Rewarded ;. ; President _Pr.esented Introduction of the president- elect of the Associated Students. and the; award of emblems to men and women athletes was made this morning‘ in the last student assem- _Vnrsity basketball men receiving the block Roman S were Morris Gross '28, third_'year on the team; Paul Mott ’28,‘third year; Frank Kopp '29, first year‘; Lawrence Carr '29, second year; DinonBus_ch '29,: second year; Cha'rlcs' Smith '20, second year, ,and Kenneth Johnson '29, first~year manager. Freshmen awarded numerals for basketball were Harry Tenwolde, James Hildreth, Alvah-De .Wgese, Harold Hansen, Ransom Eng, Nel- son Thomas, Alfred.Loucks, and William Thudlum. ' Gold‘ pins, the fourth year aivnrd for women who have earned a minimum'of—1000 points,‘ were present_ed to‘ Miss Margare't'Giles (Continued on Page 4) , Dr."_'(1‘ertrude'Laviii;' to ' n ' Speak at Graduation lijorty-five’ . ‘degree students, ninety-nine elementary, certificate students, and thirty-one junior cer- tificute students, ‘ graduating from State college, will participate in the graduutionexerciscs at the or- ganlpavilion in Balboa park_§_i;i- ‘day afternoon, Jung ‘17. at '5 o'clock. , ‘ ' A processional will open the music from the college lee clubs, ivlio.ivill sing “Glorious Forever." by Bruno Huhn. _ . Dr. Gertrude’ Laws. ‘formerly head of the departnicnt-of educa- tion‘..liere,...who'f is receiving her doetoi"s. degree“ from Columbia university this month, will speak , ,WEl_)NESDAY 11:55‘ a. m.—_—MeisIins ‘of. the. executive committee, room 13. p, m.—'—_Rohoarn’__l of,_,T;«r‘alflh tests and nieasuife ‘s, Mr. Ault; graduation program, Dr. Georgia V.- Coy; nnd affiliations, Dr. Pierce. - 3‘ sion... He deploivcdthe cheap sen- timentality connected _wi'th peace I _ . talk, and plead for more common ni:inicnts'.”1”in_u talk before the In- uense to pwwmt ‘the ,,‘,,tgD‘n from teruutiunul Relations club last being exposed to the dangcrs~of ‘Wednesday evening. I. " ‘ ' ‘V9’--" - " ' ““‘Wasliington could“huve"short- I Mr‘ 'L°°"“"d’5 l"‘°l’“"°.d“°‘”' cued the revolution by ‘four years‘ a."".'d drew hmmd--°rm°'sm'f'°m Em.” hm] Md .1‘ figulqr “my 0.‘ members of the club when discus- , _ . , , sion was opened. Several con- 5U'000" "id Mr‘ L°°n“n"‘“““But"'tended'that‘ for/‘America ‘to in- the fear that he would become a , .. , , .. crease her ‘armaments would be a "'3 l”'‘blow at the idealfof ‘peace. ‘~ ;‘itir. 4 3"‘-’l‘lie militia of’Wiishington is ;Le'0mu'd maintained “mt n Hm"-(L lhe siiine tlilni"that we depend on M‘ mmy V Eloegtjnotfi ?,°'f,ea§;",'|y . .- _ .‘ ‘ _ .meun war since ie ,- ""‘i“Y 1'01‘ 1|". “Tm?-‘ANY urmv l-hi“ has fouglit its normiil csharcu (eff “"3 United-Smlefi .L‘lH\,¢||l1.t0i!0llN1'wars without ever having a large must be ninllitlii for two years. 4‘iSt,,,,,;';n,,,_,,,.,,,y_. — ' - I -“Wu.c‘ame through thz-,Europeiin -_l’rcside_nt llerbert Fli_nt '20, ad- ’u:ir pretty "well because ifuropenn vised the" club members that in‘uc-‘ i-xperts advised us, and iieenuso inicord with the constitution, the \\'<_ioiiro'w Wilson we had, ii mun of,prci-ieiit officers would serve {until courage and administrative i1l)liii2".'.‘l.ll'(: end of,.the ‘next semester. The Aiiiericnii trnops__did. not win NI€!_PllC(.'iill(; was the last of the yeur.- 1 pliatic “Yes" to ‘ the question "Should America M«ain'tain.I-Ie'i;.~Ar‘- f the report by the Night,’ acts l\_' and V, iiudi» l l ,‘Submission 0 t _ __ rommittei:-piifcomnlnittees was niiide °'_"""- , ‘subsequent to appointment by "!‘{Hll‘JRsDlAYf T ‘uh President Hardy of the following 3 P'_ ‘‘ ‘"f“'‘: d° ~.w° di members:—Mr,__,Qutcalt, cliairniiiii, N'3_ " “"9" "C ° “'5 "__"' ' ‘Miss Benton. DrT‘Coy~,-»Dr ..Will_l§., __ i°m""' ,-_-R|DAY ‘ . E. Johnson, Miss Clark, .-Pierce T ‘ __~_- . . g . an... L. salami. Smitffili. .-mil '3 .”.'.'....'I‘‘ ..',’.'’'‘'.'.‘:‘‘'''''.‘‘‘?‘'“"~!!., lln_E3l5°.“._ and Miss JG 9' R“."‘' 5'... ...._1'w..im."Na.i.i .-.i..;.. 'T‘mner»'. cal, entire play on stage, can i I,'auditoI-ium. - - ~ SATURDAY p. m.-—Twclftli_\*Nigiit relioar-- mi, cast ll, audilfiriilhi. I. . ‘C’ MONDAY “L0:-10 S.‘ m.—-Distribution ‘of the annual edition-"of The. Three Students in ii.” ' ' Last Radio Programl 6 1 I As the final;_t-ollege radio pl-0.; gram of the sclio_ol_ year, threel members of Alpha. Mu .Sigma Junior Aztec, training school bi'o"uilciisteil over KFSD last«night,| i-eporus’i‘i'.- , ' Mi” 130“ Bern? Rayner '29. 50-. 6 p. m.—Dl-ell rolielaranl ‘of prano, who sang the lending rolei Twelfth Night. cngt l. front. ‘in “Thor Serenade,'.'. . the spring .- portion. ‘ ' opera, was the soloist. l\iiss"Mai‘y 6}‘. m.—,-Di-fen reiicnl-I"al of Luxen '28, violinist, and Miss ' Twelfth Night on. “’I‘-he 'C(l)Il(1uO8t of. Adoles- cence." ' , l"residcnt Hardy ivill-de'live’i"_ii"fi address to the graduates and pre- sent the diplomas: ‘ .' , Folloiving the__singlng"of' “i*_‘alr San Die o" the _£]‘_i_l(.iU!ltlOn core-_ monies wi be closed by u reces- siunul. , g Committee C-ensures , ~~Edi_tor’fo‘r:Masthead ‘,Co'als of wrath wer_e_ showered upon the head of Alexander Cros- by '28,eilitor‘of The Aztec, by inehibers of--thmexeeutive eon1init- tee who declared in.u spepiul.niect- ing Monday noon that the editoi‘ luid' exceeded _ his autiioi'ity in i'li:inging the pa‘pcli'_s_ masthead without getting proper sanction.’ Proposed .by Miss Artlin Tyler "BR. seconded by ‘Ernill Tlionipson‘ vocatedlittle, less, or none; ten I . 2 . ,sK.I¢'mEeo",*oiiI;IrosnI;x: WEDNESDAYFJUNE‘8;“192T’;f'7""'f_”"*"""‘“""‘:"‘T*‘**“j'--‘W Of T e Aztec paper's status is revealed by a con- sideration of the departmcnts'ac- cordingto the separate estimates of. students, faculty, and members: ‘News -was ranked, as good by the majority of all three "groups; for «preference, it- was given fifst place by,---t‘he_st_nff. but only sccon'd'_ by facility . "and students’: , » -_ ' The sports section was generally acclaimed as good," though the staff wavered between good .and fair in.its judgment. Staff mem- bers placed athletic news as third (Continued on Page. 4) womhisiunsiiia iiizcizivisiniiziz Miss Aniicttc vCOl1Sl€liltlllC Vt/rites B .e s t"l?.s§ay'Qii 4 \/Vorld Peace. ” ‘ ‘Miss. Annette "Constantine '28, was named winner Monday of the third annual aiternutivcs—for—wac prize essay contest. by Irving E. Outcalt, chairman of the coninLit- ‘tee of judges. “~- - " Miss Constantine's paper was written on “'i'he,Sett'ling of the Idea jPeace',"‘as1in'altern'ati'\7e' for war. ‘Miss Helen Stone '30,-«was. awarded second place in ‘the con- test. ' ‘ 'Tlie prize of twenty dollars was offered as a memorial to a young college «woman,who died in 192-1, and who was "interested in"the cause.of pcaceannil believed that students should take an acti_ve in- terest in foreign ‘relations. ‘Miss Lucile Hildreth was awarded the prize in 1925 and Lloyd Ruocco in 1926. . , Tardyfaridyidates. _ 2 ' Ruled Off Ballot » ..._ 1 After one meeting had_ disbiW7 ed in confusion and the same fate appeared imminent for the second, the" executive committee last Thursday in special meetingpasscd ii motion prohibiting 'can_didatcs for student offices from withdraw- ingdeclinations made in nomin'iit- ing assemblies. » . i g The legislation applied to three students-who were nominated in the assembly of May 30, -and de- clined at that time. Latcrvinthe day they altered ‘their decision and ‘were placed on the ballot by the sec_retary,,>af‘_ the Associated Students. ,5-" M _ - ‘ Argument on the‘ legality of the withdrawal. oflusdcclinations ,—di- vided the committee evenly. until against allowing withdrawal; - Among the ' arguments GEDl5b”;WlNS” . (STUDENT. BAi;l;0Tf—“ staff , the final vote was taken and._a motion passed five" votes to'.two ‘pre- sented aguinst.the motion _\vas that of Mitchel Saudi '30, who main-4 .:i;.’ui':1ii(l,'Dc\Vcc§cf]olinson7 Miss. Buckley a'n(l’”R3ol)--'- ert“B;irl)oiir_VVin. . *j-';~-l}y'a niajority of 59 voleii, Ter-. tr encic Geddis '20, was elected presi- 1927-1928‘ over Ricli'moiid' Bar- bour '30,-in ii_reguliii° two-day_ cl_cc-’ I tion’enilingyesterduy,‘ ,-[Ehc county.‘ stood‘ 234' for nu». Geddis to 225 for Mr. Barbqiir. . interest in the -election was high, _ slncefbotli the presidentinl.‘can_di-.,, dates we-re~cunside"reil strong. -~_ Otlicr ,ciindi'tlates ‘elected aref, bliss i~is-tligr liuckley '2_9, s'ec'r'e- tury; Alvuli.,ile,,5Vccse:J3,Q,'_§|'9l!$- urer; l(ennu'Lh Johnson '29, coin’- missioner of ntliletics;. Donald liitxinil '29, _coniinissioncr of‘ .fl- iinncc; _niid ‘Robert lliii'lioiir'-'30, ‘men's ieprcscntntivc to the tive eoinniittec. , ‘ A revote "on the offices-of _vjcc- president and women's representa- ' tivc, for which- no candidate rc- eeived ii niiijority of the votes cast, continue until ii p. in. tomorrow. The candidates for vice-president- ui-e Miss Ruth Vnrncy '28, .and: woincli’:-i representative, Miss An- nette Zeiss '30 and Miss _Lora 'I‘onipkins,’28,‘ are running. The number of votescast forthe leading" candidates .for other of- fices follows: vicc-president, Miss Ambrose, 181; Miss.Varney, 225; illiss Nclina Nynieycr '29, 55; sec- retary, Miss ‘Buckley, ri31;_,Miss Marjorie Mellwnin '29, V'1_; treas- urcr, Mr. De Weese, 314; Wright McConnell '29, 71; commissioner of athletics, ‘Mr. Johnson, 465; _ men's reprcsentii'tivc, -'l\lr_'._'Bnr- 190; ,Theoilore Treutlein '29, - 384;" ivomen's ' ijepresciitative, 3 Miss 'I‘oi'npkins', 122;_‘il\iiss Zeiss, 183-; Miss Vern Ukeneskey '30, '77; Miss Dorothy Pray '30, 83; commis-- §ioi‘ieii“of’fiiiniicc, Mr. Brand, 257; Alfred Loucks '30, 73; >Ermil, Thompson"1l0, 157. 1 First .luriior"Aztec V 1 Annual issue Monday sive yeui-.__in which the _ti:uii:ing school has published a piipcr,_the nu'al,cditien of‘ The-Jiinior Aztec next MTn‘ilWyT‘ ‘ '_ ‘ 'l\iiss lsnbelle Farnum '27, p'ub—-_' lisher ofthe children's paper, stat- ed yesterday that the .children have ’ sought the cooperation of the. en-' , tire school to miikc the eight-page annual ii representative _ work. Compositions from each grade, in-. six pages of the paper, and the two iiemuining will‘be given over. to ed- itorials and literature reviews. ex_ecu- - ' tained that a precedent .covering~ this circumstanceywas set in 1926 when Robert Barbour '80, wi_i_s"iil- By the annualedition. the 013's’ are,.hoping to set zi precedent to ., No:"3'r ’ .- /’ dent of the-A'ss‘ociuted Students’ for ' ' ' V /, -st+irt'ed' iit ,8'ii'.':iii.' todfiy"ii'nd'"\'vill""" ‘" Miss l’loreiic‘e'Ainbrose -’29;""For~'» , ~ bour.‘ 239; .}‘i'nnlc..Boydstun "20, _ _ n "_ Ciilniinating the second-succes-» ‘ 6B grade will‘ issue the first:'iin- ‘ ' cluding the second, will coinprisc , ' program and will be followed by ' lowed to withdrawn ‘dgcliniition. _ , (Continued on Page 3) be followed by succeeding journal- istsi in the training school. Man ‘Ha?-S Yet ‘(To Coh_ipa_s.§ _by_Rachmaninoff and'.“_Inv,ictusv," . pate theifuture un