TIIK DAILY NKIJIiASUAX WKDNKSIMY. OCTOUKK .r. 19.12 FOUR BIBLE STRESSES SPEED, BLOCKING T OEMS DRILL Nubbins to Oppose Varsity With Ames' Plays in Open Scrimmage. DISPLAY MORE ZIP, FIRE Bishop, Debus Look Good In Swinging Out for Interference. ffreater speed and better block ing are the slogans this week as the Nebraska varsity go thru busk drills in preparation for the first game of the season Saturday against the Iowa State Cyclones. Wednesday afternoon the Sear let moleskinners will clash with the Nubbins in an open workout starting at 4 o'clock. The reserve j squad will be using Iowa State , niBvsi featuring the passing and i running talents of fleet Dick Giefe. an All Big Six halfback selection from last year in addition to a pair of big, fast backs in Scha froth mid Theophilus. The latter, a former Randolph, Neb., high school star, is playing his first sea son with the Ames squad. Huskers Show Fire. With the first cold snap of the season forcing them to keep mov ing, lh Seai let gridaters ran thru their plays with far more zip and fire in Tuesday's session. Out standing were Clair Bishop and Warren Debus, the lightweight guards who swung out of the line to run interference in sensational fashion. Lee Penney, first string end who is recovering from a pain ful face infection, sailed down the field to nab some difficult passes as did Steve Hokuf. Chris Mathis divided his time be tween calling signals for a second string back field including Miller and Murray at halfbacks and Fahrnbruch at full, in addition to alternating with SUab at left half on the first varsity combination. Apparently, Bible is grooming Mathis to relieve Masterson at quarter and Staab at half. The regular eleven which finds Hokuf and Penney at the ends, Corwin Hulbert and O'Brien at tackles. Bishop and Debus, guards, Ely, center with Masterson, Bos well, Sauer and Staab in the back field will probably get the starting call Saturday against Ames. Clare Campbell, the game captain, may receive the nod for one of the guard posts. was heir", in the Y. t C. A. rooms j in the Temple recently. A discus sion of various phases' of life and policies tn Russia was given by Melvin Martin, who has just re turned from a trip there. This group will meet every Thursday evening from 7:30 to 8:30, according to John Johnson, ! chrs?; Thtf rians for j students to Reserve Courts ruining JHUUUIIJJS Hit 1(1 111- cuss various topics of interest to students. On some occasions the meetings will be entirely round' table discussions, and at others i For Each Day's Play On Current Date. tnere will be speakers. All upper classmen and their friends are in vited. Mr. Martin will continue Ins dis cussion at the next meetin; by Joe Miller j Rules for a new system of ro sciviiig tennis nnd handball courts at the Agricultural college campus : were released from Dean W. W. I Burl's office Saturday. The new : p!nn indicates that mote stuoents ' will le ahle to be accommodated on the courts than formerly. Students will be limited to one , hour of plav and reservations ma not be made in advance of current date except when the courts are desired eailier than the office hours which are from 8 till 12 and from 1 to 5. The rules released from Dean Bun's office indicate that theie is a possibility that new handball courts may be insta'led in the horse barn for ag i icultural college of the student activities building. Students are urced to reserve Innocents Urge Quick Athletic Ticket Sales With the announcement that reservations are now being re ceived for seats in the stadium, it will behoove students to act quickly if they have postponed purchasing athletic tickets Those who wait until after Wednesday will be obliged to accept whatever seats are left and In all probability will not be able to get eai.s in the card section, which is the nucleus of the student section. The most intensive part of the ticket sale drive will be today and tomor row. Da not put off buying you ticket any longer. ; LAW COLLEGE STARTS OPEN LECTURE SERIES To those who want baseball again on the Univera.ty of No-1 students. M present all braska camnus ami tht iiwimis courts are located in the the writer, John K. Selleck replies inusiy. tno COUI.ts but not to do so unless "Buy your season athletic ticket, they are soinr to use them. All of and we will have baseball nc.it the couiis for both tennis and spring. It's all a mallet of fi-. handl ."II r.i e reserved for class use nances. It is absolutely untrue to from 9 to 12, except Saturday. say mat the athlotie depai taic.it naa irowneu on the diamond sport. out u is certain that imle.-s stu dents give greater support to th ucnei campaign, there will be ,io Features Talks on Lives o Great Lawyers, Their Contributions. funds for baseball. Selleck also intimated that sev eral minor sports activities might come under the economic ban this year. So there we are! : TiCKLTS ARRIVE FOR MINNESOTA GRID TiLTj r So far George Sauer has nad no trouble with his ankle, the same member that caused him no end of trouble last year and which final ly George had to submit to an op eration. In fact, Saner is firm in the belief that it feels stronger than the other ankle. Let's hope so, anyway. coach Bible is very much at tached to an old grey sweatshirt in which he appears to direct the Cornhuskers in their workouts. I am not accusing Bible of advertis ing, but it happens that this sweat shirt bears the name "Doane" and the number "l" on the back. There seems to be a veil of secrecy about just how the Nebraska mentor came into possession of the priz but those who say they know have refused to clear up the mystery. This much is known, however, thai he has been wearing it for at least two years. Not much help, though. Dean H. H. Foster of the Law college vesterday announced the inauguration of a series of spe cially designed lectures for the or ientation of the freshman law stu dent to the work of the lawyer. The series which was begun last week by H. H. ilson, who spoke on the life of a lawyer, will con tinue for several weeks with lee lures on the lives and work of some of the more outstanding law rers and judges. A lecture on the life of Edward loke and his relation to iht tine I trine of the supremacy of the law , , .was the second in the series. BIOCK Of OUU L'UCatS riaCea Among other legal biographies n CoU or Pftliconm ; vhicli will be discussed are those un ouic oi wuiiofcuiu i (t Hale ana Jetti'-vs, known as the best and worst of English judges, and the storv of the life of "Mansfield, the Magnificent." "Anyone interested in the study of the legal profession or the lives of those men who have affected its study," Dean Foster said, "is welcome to attend these lectures. They will lie given weekly on Fri day, at 11 o'clock, in 101 Law building." COMin LSORY DRILL V LCLA LIMELIGHT KOTC Officers Threaten Stvdent Handbill Distributor. For S2.75 Each. A block of 500 tickets for the Nebraska-Minnesota game to be played Oct. ! at Minneapolis were received Tuesday from University of Minnesota authorities and will go on sale immediately at the coliseum athletic office. The paste boar .'s are selling for S2.75. which includes the federal tax. According to Johr. K. Selleck, Husker business manager of ath letics, the Nebraska section is lo cated on the 50-yard line in the Minnesota stadium which is a horseshoe shaped affair. About 100 orders for tickets have already been received. Nebraska alumni living in Minnesota will sit with the Scarlet rooters and are pur chasing their ducats through Sel leck. The Burlington railroad has an nounced a special round trip ex cursion rate of $11.04 for chair car and $14.95 for Pullman to apply for the week end of Oct. 15. T NOMINATI OF CRITIC TO SENATE School Paper Flays Chappie For Calling University Communistic. AMES TEAM GETTING SET FOR HUSKER MIX Veenker's Eleven 'Confident They Will Pin Defeat On Cornhuskers. AMKS, la.-Both the Cyclone football squad and its genial coach. George Veen Iter, began the eek's practice Monday in hr spirits. Coach Veenker seemed faul well satisfied with the showing that the team made in trouncing j Morningside Saturday especially with the scoring power exniuiicu in the final quarter und is this week concentrating on perfecting plays to down the first conference foe, Nebraska, at Lincoln Satur day. The Cyclone mentor believes that his men found themselves in the second half of the Morningside game, and that that flash ol power has instilled into them the confidence that will be needed to turn back the powerful Cornhusk ers. I have kept the boys pretty busy for a month now." sa d Coach Veenker. "I'm going to ease up from now on and concentrate on a few new plays." He indicated th.'l there would be little scrimmage en the schedule for this week. The only somber spot en the C , clone outlook is that Hatold Tern- ' pleton of Ocheyedan, end, will !' out of the lineup for at least two weeks with a badly wrenched knee received in the Morningiide game ' Coach Veenker will be forced to draw from an already slim lit l of ends to fill the vacancy, and it is probable that Ivan Impson of lies, Moines, who has been alternating between fullback and end. will re- ; main at end until Templeton re- I covers. The Cvclone line should be ma- teriallv stiengthened by the re-; turn of Gerald Smith of Milwau- I kee. guard, and Paul Berger of Manchester. Mo., tackle, who have ; been out with injuries. Jack Beyer of Des Moines will probably be in j shape to start Saturday at center. but it is uncertain whether he or Magnus Lichter of Algona will get first call for that post. PAVEMENT REIMIKS ARE MADE Tl ESI) VV IN FRONT OF SOC the bricks in front of the Social Science hall, were repaired yester day by the Lincoln street depart ment. The cement overlapping, which were caused by expansion, were being removed and replaced by asphalt. The asphalt will ex pand and contract without causing injury to the pavement. The work was supervised by L. C. Seacrest. JUCGIN6 TEAM PLACES Nebraska Delegates to Inter Collegiate Contest Rank ' Ninth. The I'niversity of Nebraska dairy cattle judging team failed to keep its national judging title when it comneted in the intercol- I legiate judging contest at Water i loo, la., this week. Nebraska placed ninth. Iowa won the con ' test and Ontario was second. I Arthur Peterson, Farm House; ! A I Kbers, Farm House, and Car j lvle Hodgkins were on the team. The team was second on Holsteins, tenth on Ayrshires and seventh on ' Brown Swiss. Hodgkins and Peter son tied for third individual hon : ors in judging Holsteins, Ebers ' was seventh on Brown Swiss and Hodgkins was eighth on Guern seys. Peterson ranked tenth In ' dividually in the entire judging. 150V ACTOR ENTERS CALIFORNIA SCHOOL AS COLLEGE FROSH Santa Clara, Calif. iCNSl. Jackie Cooan, now eighteen years old. has registeied as a stu dent at the I'niversity of Santa Clara, it was announced this week. The former boy motion picture star, who expects sometime to act for talkies, successfully tried out for a position as cheer leader and will he prominent in undergrad uate activities during the coming year. DEPARTMENT HAS INCREASE Nineteen Students Register For Year as Physical Education Majors. An increasing number of girl have registered in the physical education department. This year there are nineteen, fourteen of them are freshmen, two sopho mores, two juniors, and one sen ior. The freshmen are Evelyn Burgess, Alpha Catania, Mavis Clear, Mary Fugua, Katharine Glbbs, Hazel Hawk, Helen. Kent, Gene Kurt, Edwina McConchie, Justine Mickey, Vleen Riesland, Beth Phillips, and Beth Taylor. The sophomores are La Bonne Gammell and Iva Krabbenhoff, Lois Foley and Elnora Deningfir are juniors and Doris De Ford Is a senior. Clean Clothes for that Game DON'T WAIT Until the last minute. G?t ready now for the Ames geme. We'll be real tufy all week. V CLEANERS V.'ythsrs-Tucker .'.:."i;7 2l Yo. 14 f A Street LOS ANGELES. (CNSl Officers of the R. O. T. C. at the Univer sity of California at Los Angelas last week threatened to thnev ' Lawrence Young. '32. "off the 1 campus," if he persisted in distri- j pfjrfJVCB Young said that he had ordered 2.500 handbills, urging the aboli tion of compulsory military train ing, printed at his own expense I and that he planned to form a stu dent committee to fight this thing to the finish." A position, bearing the signature of 1.000 stuoents. asking that optional training be substituted for the present sys tem, was denied by the University of California regents last year. Select Class of Prodigies From Many Applicants Aged 14 or 15. EVANSTON, 111. (INSi. Out of more than 300 applications. Presi dent Walter Dill Scott of North western university this week had selected his "class" of prodigies, whose college careers are to be watched with interest by educators throughout the country. Those singled out as prodigies are either fourteen or fifteen years of age and were chosen because of marked ability shown in pre paratory schools. Although in cer tain instances they will receive j special attention, their courses in j genera? will r the same as those i taken ag regular entering stu dents. Following H a list of President Scott'a potential geniuses: Mary Margaret Moore, fourteen, j of Danville, 111. Daughter of an j attorney; HKes oancing. swimming : and other sports; doesn't know ex- Laranlie Wyo. (CNSp actly what she's going to do. other f k frateVnity "brother.' Jane Alice Hall, fifteen, of Clo vis, N. M. Also a daughter of an attorney; plays tennis; wants to "take up Journalism." George E. Alcott, fifteen, of Weiner, Ark. Son of a physician, plans to study medicine; plays basketball and baseball. James Allan Norton, fifteen, of Flint, Mich. Will major in crea tive chemistry because his mother teaches chemistry. William Duncan Stech. fifteen, of New York Plans to hecorne an attorney; plays football and bas ket ball; his mother is director of publications at Columbia univer sity and his father is a research statistician. Education Head, Speaks to Students in Ellen Smith Hall. Madison. CNSi. Recent nomi nation of John B. Chappie, editor, for United tates senator from Wisconsin on the republican ticket last fortnight was sharply criti cized by The Daily Cardinal at the University of Wisconsin. "When practically an entire population of a state reputed so i politically wise as isconsin chooses a msn to sit in the senate of the United States who has des ecrated the name of the state uni- Several 'bucklings' in t he pa ve-' ment due to overlappinss of the cement which forms the base for Dance at the Park Ylnes.l;iy. Thursday. Friday and Saturday Kveninpr Leo Beck nnd His Orchestra ID BE SG ALPH MAN Obtains Money, Clothes, and Fiancee Using Narre of Football Star. The vocational guidance group of A. W. S.. under the leadership of Gertmde Clarke, met at Ellen .smith hall Monday at 4 o'clock. Dr. Fordyce, chairman of the de partment of education, addressed the group on the subject .t "Voca tional Guidance." Dr. Fordyce is engaged in analyzing vocational choice and aiding girls in choosing their vocations. In his speech, he stated that the choice of a course of study and the prepaiation for a vocation is becoming important for young wo men today, as doois of the differ ent professions are openine to them. : "Success is dependent on the j right choice and adequate prepara- j tion for a career." he said. "Com- I ! petition is k-en. both for men and ! i women. Two girls out of ever' How a ' twelve are adapted for their voca- imper- i tion as a ruie. Most students after j versity, then it is certainly time to fear and question," stated The Cardinal. ; The editors recalled that Chap- j pie nas tor more than ten months toured the slate, attacking all lib eral thought, playing upon the worst and the blindest prejudices of the people, slandering the ad ministrative officers, professors and students of the university, both individually and collect:' 'y. and misrepresenting disgrace- fully." i Chappie has repeatedly charged j that the university is a "hothea" i ! of radic alism, communism and ag- j nosticism. 5 GOlNGO SO-CALLED "BARGAIN" CORDUROYS OR CAMPUS CORDS? IRION 10 CONDUCT i so of nating a prominent University being graduated take up whatever , prinrjn;i fif TpafhPlV Hiflh Wyoming football player, ob-1 job they can get, and as a result ( ' ' ll.Lipai 01 ledUICI niyil tained money from many trusting i become dissatisfied with every- , - ..... j . V. ; ,l r .. ......... DISCUSS LIFE IN RUSSIA First Meeting of Fireside Group Held in Temple On Thursday. persons and in one town proposed marriage only to leave the girl waiting at the church was le veaied here this eek. The man, last reported to be op erating in Wisconsin, is in the habit of giving his name as "Wal ter Kingham of Cheyenne, mem ber of Sigma Alpha Epsilon," it was reported. He has obtained several loans from fraternity "brothers" in Cas per, worked his way into the con fidence of a Wisconsin widow and has taken french leave with an other "brother's" new suit, in ad di:ic.n to all of the spare cash be I could borrow, according to the ! record so far. He was still said to (be operating, and S. A.E. national I headquarters has been forced to I issue a bulletin of warning to all . thin?." the professor asserted. Made Unemployed Survey. A short time ago Dr. Fordyce ruiiue a survey of the unemployed and found that they were unem ployed because they went into the wrong occupation, that they went ; into it because of a c bance, not i because they were adapted for it. "There are two things to think j ot in choosing an occupation. It ' is necessary to be adapted to it I and to enjoy it." He continued by I saying that to make a scientific j choice, it is essential to study I yourself, to study the various oc cupations and to make adequate preparation for the one for which ! you are fitted. j "The wrong choice fills the country with drifting misfits, wastes time, and reduces the pro- chapters, i ductive power of the country Meanwhile, university oi wyo- said mine student leaders are contem plating the feasibility of some type he The first Fireside Forum, a dis- 1 of label for football players, such cusston group for upper classmen, as "not good without this signa ture; accept none ljui gcuu-ine." Classified Ads 10s Per Line Minimum 2 Lines "In studying your capacities, it is necessary to discover your weak as well as your strong points. Everyone differs from his associ ates and his talents differ within himself." be concluded. Will Tell Students How To Study. Vi . V H. S. Morton, pnti. ij.iii "I Teachers college hih ijool. will lead the Freshmen Co'innl meeting in the Y room at the Tem ple Wednesday evening. His V.pic! will be "How to .Study." ir.d he I will also answer questions. j Alfred Adams, who is in r:ii;. j of the meetings believes this i.n i will be especially welcomed i.y t he 1 freshmen. I Meeting Open to All. j The meeting is open to hi!, tb.ij freshmen are urged to he pi n'.. according to Mr. Adams. The ! council will begin at 7 o cloc k an J last until 6. ( Another meeting for f re .-omen ' engineers will be held in th'.' a!:.m-1 ni office at the temple at the 6air 1 time, known as the Freshmen F.n- ; gineer's Huddle, and will be 'ed by Ray Ramsay, alumni secretary. This is the first meeting for this group which will be organized to meet regularly. Prof. L. A. Bins ham of the college of engineering is sponsoring the grotip. ou deckle. Do you want John Law to seize him as a suspicious character, or to apologize for having annoyed a gentleman? b truth even off-campus folk are impressed by the distinctive style and conservative good taste displayed in Campus Cords. These handsome light-colored Cords are correct in shade and in every detail of university style. Their hip-fit and straight-hang have won the Joyalry of college men from Atlantic to Pacific Campus CorJs laugh at hard wear and ask for more. And they keep their sty le-lines through countless cleanings or washings. Meet Campus CorJs personally. On view now, at a leading store near ) ou. Remember the name Campus Cords. JiLOESSER.HEYNEMANN CO. SAN FRANCISCO . Lo Angela . Portland . Chicigo Also designers and Makers of the Campus Ctrd Cesuui Jacktt iwagger. ashable; Campm Buiki, those distinctive tan moleskin trousers; and Campus TwetJs, the handsome new all wool trousers with Campus Cords' styling. Karmelkorn FOR CENTINE Kirm'lkorn. brt but trl popcorn, delirious whipped cream fulr nd rarnieled appUi o to JotiiiaoD a. 1J2', O. Lost and Fi ounc LOST Elgin -rint wth mlth rmr-i-t strip. FiinlKf Mum tcj lany )brsk.aji office. Reward. Hair Cutting PtERSON Pernonitie Pera..n Perr- ' lr. Hair Cuttinr. 33c Sr. Pierauo Jr. 1231 K street. Of Reserved Seat for Football Tickets will be held Today at 5. p. m. at the Student Activities Office GET YOUE ITESIICSir &i vy VV $6 SEASON TICKET $6 " CANT BUST EM if SAaraAnciKO CAJ.WOBMI, Hsvt you htrd tbout'thtir ntw, low pricti? Gmuinr ontr with this IASEL INSIDE THE ISTBD Si We feature a complete line of Campus Cords it S9 J '796. (Jw Suede and Cord, DovMlairi I. .J