J.I V ruun Traditional Sneak Night Follows Closely on Heels of Full Week-End T11K usual comparative lull which follows on the hocls of a full week end has settled on the campus. With the ex ception of the ranhellcuic ban quet at the Cornhusker last night, no functions of major important to students are scheduled for the middle of the week. A number of fraternity and sorority freshman classes, finding things rather dull, took .Monday night as the occasion tor the traditional sneak night. Marigolds adorned the tables at the informal luncheon for the mothers of the pledges at the Al pha Phi bouse yesterday noon. Twenty-five guests were there, and Mrs. Lulu M. Wood, Mrs. W. A. Posey, and Mrs. M. T. McShane made arrangements for the affair. Mrs. W. C. Becker, president of the mother's club, presided. The first of a series of monthly meetings sponsored by the Faculty PEEPfNG IWOUCHTHf Perky Polly If yon can b-ar to " all these grand new things and not break dnirn and break into your bank account, you're a stronger woman than ice arc. We worn you that a trip through the fashion departments will make pou dissatisfied Kith every thing you ocn. We warn you, but ire wager you'll be here anyxcayt Blow Your Own Hom We're making a big noise about these little bracelets that give you a chance to blow your own burn. 1.95 Street Floor A Royal Silhouette Meet the most honored silhou ette of the season the prin cess. It's chic and young, and grand to set off slim, young figures. Our collection is varied! 6.95 V Basement Ecclesiastically Inclined Brothers and sisters, bow your beads and view the ecclesias tic dress. Demure from its cowl neckline to the cord gir dle and bishop sleeves . . . and as smart a frock as can be worn! 16.75 Third IUiiji Initial Bag It'a new to have the mono gram on your handbag be a t)it of mirror. You'll be seeing yourself on the flap of your iag! : 2.95 : (Initial Extra) 1 fitrnt Floor flXDLUDtC. 1 - ..Mm: Jl THE SOCIAL CALENDAR WEDNESDAY. Premedic banquet, Grand hotel, 6 p. m. Faculty Women's club, Ellen Smith hall, 2:30 p. m. THURSDAY. Zeta Tau Alpha alumnae, with Miss Blowden Reynon and Laura Williams, 2320 Washing ton, 7:30 p. m. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Mothers club, chapter house, 2:30 p. m. FRIDAY. Chancellor and Mrs. E. A. Burnett, faculty reception at Carrie Belle Raymond hall, 8 to 11 p. m. Kappa Alpha Theta alumnae, supper meeting. Women's club will be held in the form of a tea this afternoon at Ellen Smith hall. No program has been arranged, but a business meeting of the organization will be held followed by an informal tea. Mrs. T. Witte will pour, and au tumn flowers will be used as dec orations. The hostesses will be Mrs. E. A. Burnett, president of the group, Mrs. Dale Coffman, Mrs. Poscoe Abbott. Mrs. W. V. Yocum, Mrs. William Gooding, Mrs. T. T. Smith, Mrs. I. W. Frantz, and Mrs. T. Witte. About one hundred guests are expected to be present. The Alpha Mother's club enter tained at a tea yesterday after noon at the home of Mrs. L. F. Seaton, with the mothers of the pledges as special guests. Mrs. A. H. Kean, Mrs. William Kropp, and Mrs. L. B. Temple were hostesses with Mrs. Seaton. Mrs. A. L. Moeller and Mrs. Curry Watson presided at the tea table which was decorated with a centerpiece of garden fglowers and white tapers in silver holders. Marjorie Seaton and Virginia Kean assisted in the serving. About thirty-five guests attended. Betty Baker and Leah Carlson n-iii Kp hostesses tonizht at a pre- nuptial party for Jean Wilhelmy, whose marriage win ume piauc mc sixteenth of November. The guests uHll h served at small tables de lightfully decorated with candles and garden nowers. n.unia uc Brown, Harriet Weaver, Marian Fleetwood, Mary Elizabeth Proud fit, Esther Souders, Barbara Har rison Evesia Damewood, Doneta Gillaspie, Helen Elizabeth Lawr ence, Frances Ireland, and Jane Edwards will be present. From France comes the news that Barbara Spoerry, former uni versity student and Tri Delt, is preparing to start work in earnest at the University of Lyons on No vember 2. Miss Spoerry won a scholarship to the university last spring and spent six weeks on French conversation and grammar practice at L'AUliance Francaise in Pans before going to Lyons. Barbara completed her entrance examinations recently and was ad judged a superior student. At the University of Lyons she will have classes from nine to eleven in the morning with the privilege of hearing lectures between eleven and twelve. Two afternoons a week field trips to places of in terest will be taken, and special guides will be employed to give the history of the locality and ex plain the points of charm. Their honeymoon completed. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Faulkner, who were married in Lincoln on September 27, arrived in Phila delphia yesterday, where they will live while Mr. Faulkner attends the Wharton School of Finance of the University of Pennsylvania. On their wedding trip the couple spent two days in Toledo and from there went up the St. Lawrence river to Montreal. Tbey visited Lake Champlain and the New England states and spent last Sat urday evening in New York City with Miss Virginia Faulkner, Mr Faulkner's sister. Mrs. Faulkner is the former Jean Rathburn, Del ta Gamma from Lincoln. The main address at the first Pre-Medic banquet of the year to night will be given b Dr. H. Win nett Orr. prominent Lincoln ortho which will be atunded by neventy five members of the organization, will be held at the Grand hotel at six o'clock. Jameg Sbafer, presi dent of the organization, it In charge of arrangements. pledging or five new men. mey are Harold Olsen of Lincoln, Hen ry Hull of Winner, William Dun zan of Lovell, Wyo.. Delbert Mc Cormich of Lincoln, and Paul Maxwell of Beatrice. An informal dinner will precede CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS risnsifiuM Are Ch 10c PER LINE Minimum of 2 Line! Board and Room ONF va'ancy for boy t 1535 R. Room and board. Good opportunity. FOR SALE FOR SALE 1931 Ford Victoria. Excel lent condition. Miut ell. leaving city. Call F2446 Lost and Found LIBERAL reward. Return of Star ap phire rnr liut gt. nlte either at Haye'g Inn or Prry'n Cafe or vlrln ltv of earn No questions aoked. Mar paret Shotll. 111 So. treet, Omaha. Phone Hardy 3449. LOST A ro-lla Vpiil..n pin. with th name Eugene Pentr engraved on bavk. Finder phone M3733. IOfiT Man' Garland -arrlet wateli. Ix.frt In stadium. Saturday at game Reward. B131X Blond Giant of Iowa State Cyclones Is Like Loaded Dynamite to Pioneers AMES, la. Smiling and good natured as he lugs bis books around the campus during the week, the blond young giant named Paul Berger doesn't look to his Iowa State college classmates like a man loaded with dynamite. But Denver university found that he was just that last Friday night. What's more, somebody touched a match to the fuse. For Paul Berger's playing at left tackle was the sharpest thorn in the Cyclone forward wall time and again he knifed through the Pio neer line to smash Denver offen sives to bits. Some 10,000 fans, as well as officials and sports writers, eot accustomed to the an nouncement that "Berger made the 1 tackle. It was Berger who caught Pow ers of Denver from behind on the Cyclone 12-yard line as the fast little Rockv mountain sprint cham pion sped toward the goal and the score that would have swelled Den-1 ver's total to 19 and victory. But! the Cyclones converted Berger's i brilliant play into thc turning point of the game. They held for downs. I the departure of Dick Moron, member of Chi Phi, for Chicago tonight, where he will attend the professional journalism fraternity. Meetings of the convention, which will last from Friday through Sunday, will be held at Northwest ern University. Moran will rep the organization. FIRST AWARD TO ZETA TAU ALPHA FOR SCHOLARSHIP (Continued from Page l.i pointraents consisted of red and white candles with huge red crepe streamers. At each table where certain sororities were seated huge placards with Greek letters designating the specific sorority. At the speakers table were bowls of red and white autumn flowers. Setting aside the traditional custom of having a speaker for the evening, the program commit tee secured Dean Amanda Hepp ner and Mrs. E. A. Burnett to give the welcome addresses and the University Players to present two skits. Dean Heppner congratu lated the Panhellenic banquet committee on the success of the affair and complimented the soror ities winning the awards. Mrs. Burnett gave the opening address and stressed the idea mai in me nast too much emDhasis had been placed on frills and social func tions but the depression naa en couraged more dependability in the college women. Cast of Skits, shnrt nlnvs snonsored bv the Players and directed by Miss "Polly" Gellatly and Mrs. Viola Erickson featured a cast of Lois Patterson, Stan Deven, Dwight Perkin. Barbara Bates. Art Bai ley, Eric Lawn, Joe Diantale and Maureen Pibbels. Alpha Chi Omega presented the Panhellenic sone. Each year the sorority winning the intersorority song on Ivy Day is ask to present this song. Committees In Charge. Mr. C. L. Clarke, cltv Panhel lenic president, was in direct charge of the banquet. Roma Ridour and Susan Lau assisted hre. Mrs. Kenneth Lawson was chairman of the ticket committee and Mrs. William Newens of the decorations. Kathryn Dean had charge of the music. She sang three selections and a string trio played while the banquet was be- ng served. D ... all of the claims that have been made about smoking tobacco how it was that one was this and that one was that? After all, what you want to know when you get a thing for a certain pur pose is . . . "Was it made for that?" Granger is made of White Burley the kind of leaf tobacco that's best for pipes. And old man Wellman, who taught us how to make Granger, knew how. Granger is made to smoke in a pipe and folks seem to like it. G C !. tem Mnu Tocco Co. THE DAILY NEBRASKAN got the ball and plowed down the field for the winning touchdown. "I didn't know how I could catch him, but I knew I had to do it," ad mitted Berger after the game. Powers has a 9.6 record in the 100 yard dash. Ri-rirer himself is not lust a flash on the spoits screen. His fame as an athlete began in 1928, when he enrol led in Kii Kwuoa nig n scnuui, St. Louis, Mo. His named appeared on the all-St. Louis county football roster in 1929 and 1930, and he out tossed all other entries in the shot put in the state high school track meets in 1930 and 1931. His best throw was 49 feet 5 inches. Though not as large as many tackles, Berger makes up for lack of weight with his ruggedness, uleitn.ss and unlimited scrappi ness. He charges fast and low on offensive, and whn on the defen sive is the kind of tackle that slashes through to nab the ball toter behind the line. Burger is enrolled in industrial science Ht Iowa State, and will graduate in 1930. He will be eligi ble for football next fall. OFFICIAL BULLETIN u luiirniH urgiHiitttiiun. r laruity gruui drsinn lei uuhllll nntlir. itl iiii'i-llniiii r nllirr Information 1ur mi'intx rn ina.v huf Mem printed by alllna the lHil ISehraikan offire. Economics Club. There will ' o a sling Wednes day evening at 7 o'clock in Social Science 20.") for aU students inter ested in the formation of a club for discussion economic and po litical que s. Picnic. The Kappa Phi-Phi Tau Theta picnic will be held Friday. October 13. at Epworth Lake park. All Methodist students who wish to attend are invited to meet at Wes ley House. 1417 R St., at. 5:30. Y. W. Cabinet. Y. W. C. A. cabinet will meet Wednesday evening in Ellen Smith Hall. Marjorie Smith will be in charge of the discussion and Jean Alden will preside. Ag Y. M. C. A. Ag Y. M. C. A. freshman coun cil will meet Thursday at 7 p. m. in room 303 Ag Hall. Professor Rosenquist will continue his dis cussion on the subject of evolu tion, speaking this week on "Evo lution and the Bible." Y. M. Meeting. Y. M. C. A. Freshman council will hold its regular meeting to night at 7:15 in the Y. M. C. A. rooms at the Temple. Ward Gray of the city Y will speak and lead discussion on the subject of "Re lationships Between Men and Women in College Life." This is an open meeting and all university men are invited. NEW YORK, Oct. 11. (C. N. S.) New York university students have formed their own "Curb Ex change." On sidewalks and streets during the first few days of class work this fall they gathered to sell and trade books and other equip ment. Their cries and activity fi nally caused university authorities to assign guards to the crowd with orders to keep it moving. you ran STUDIO SQUIBS BY GALE ROCKWELL. NEW YORK, Oct. 10. Tin Pan Alley along with big business, has gone code. And that's no pun either! The song and rhythm chiefs who officially call themselves the "Music Publishers' Protective as sociation" have signed an NRA agreement which, among other things, makes it a high crime for any music house to list well-known personalities as co-authors of num bers which actually are written in their entirety by composers whose names are not so well known. Now if NRA's General Johnson will please blanket-code these ra dio crooners who insist on holding a quasl-falsetto note at the end of a number so long they could be accused of hoarding everything will be swell. They should be put on a maximum 40-second per bleat basis! While we're on the subject of singing (alleged and otherwise), here's a pleasant thought: Clau dette Colbert, whose recent ap pendiectomy temporarily inter fered with her work in the new C. B. DeMille, effort, "Four Fright ened People," is showing us a thing or two about local art. She studied in New York under Walter Kiesewetter, famous voice coach, and proves how much she learned in "The Torch Singer." Note: Patriotic boost for dic tionary manufacturers . . . You're welcome, Mr. Webster. Always glad to do our part for dear old NRA. And is the big Blue Eagle drop ping tail feathers on Broadway! Twenty big shows are scheduled to open practically at once. They include a return of the Ziegfeld Follies and a George Gershwin musical called "Let Them Eat Cake". . .which Is a sequel to "Of Thee I Sing." Then Irving Berlin and Moss Hart will do "As Thousands Cheer" for the Music Box. This is the first musical Berlin has writ ten for the Music Box since the days of the old Music Box Revues. The show promises the best ever even Irving himself admits it. "My masterpiece," says he. Marilyn Miller, Clifton Webb and Ethel Waters of "Stormy Weather" fame will be in the cast. Hey-hey! Looks like the goode olde dayes are a-comin' back! But times are not so good out in Hollywood. This NRA thing has the movie producers groggy. Thv're about readv to say al most out loud "Okay, Mr. Gov ernment. Have it your own way. Run the business to suit yourself. But if it's O. K. bv the code, can we run errands?" In a way you can't blame the nroHuppra for beine- cvnical more cynical than sore, underneath. The spectacle of one of the most highly paid groups in the world, taken collectively, walking out on strike and then proceeding iu among themselves about whose strike it is does something to uiie's sense of humor. which ia not savine there were not a lot of meritorious areuments and mitigating complications on all three sides, but so mucn caw is cheap, any way you look at it. Government control may ne me salvation of the movie industry. many believe if salvation it wants. Meanwhile, look for a Hollywood "brain trust." That would give the professor fellows h real whack at something they've been taking pot shots at for years. And they might not do so bad at that. Rampant ravings: Times Square and 42nd st. And remember ger Rom ihe tobacco that's MADE the Great White Way that runs kitty-wampua across the town: I have crossed it a thousand times and never once have I had the slightest difficulty despite all you've read about it's being the busiest corner in the world.... Radio City Music hall, the calam ity howlers notwithstanding, re mains the greatest project in theatrical fields. Roxy's stage presentations are unequaled and the majesty and grandeur of the Music Hall has never been sur passed Just a year ago Jesse Lasky told a dinner group of close friends he was penniless, but promised a rapid comeback. He's doing it at Fox, and it looks good. ...The Duncan Sisters may be on big-time radio soon with a new hilarious Topsy and Eva series. Filmland Footnotes. LeRoy Prinz, one-time big-time show stager on Broadway and now dance director at Paramount, has emerged as the great defender of Hollywood womanhood. He won't stand for any monkey-business with the girls who work for him. A fellow outside the studio gate tried to get fresh recently with some of the chorines from "Too Much Harmony," new Bing Crosby heart-break, and LeRoy socked him so far he's now trying to learn Chinese. A rude technician got similar treatment. Our best Hollywood informant, Jimmy Jerry (Yes, really! And the girls out there call him "cute." I says that blondes, for the moment, are on the wane in the sound and sequence capital, where there's a renaissance of the red-heads. The henna-haired girls were right up in front during Clara Bow's hey-day. and now that it's been discovered they photograph so well in party scenes where clothes combinations count they're doing a comeback. The pre-marital divorce (broken engagement to you) of Lila Lee and George Hill, the director, was done so nicely everyone takes it for granted they will remain the best of friends. Which is correct. Filmland's whisper artists are saying the nation's leading plati num blonde likes a cameraman. That's all right. We could never see anything especially wrong with cameramen. SPEAKER STRESSES PRAYER Miss Fern Johnson Talks to Women Students at Ag Vespers. The fourth agricultural vespers was held Tuesday at 12:20 in the Home Economics parlor. Miss Fern Johnson talked on "Thy will be done" stressing the application of the Lord's prayer to daily school life. Miss Genevieve Jeffries, head ot vespers committee, reported that about seventy-five girls were pres ent. She urges that all agricul tural rirls attend these meetings. COLLEGE STATION, Tex., Oct. 10. (C. N. S. ) The administration of Texas A and M. college will continue to oDDose the admission of women students, T. O. Walton. ' president of the college, said this week. "With women in it, Texas A. and M. would become mereiy an other college," he declared "It would lose a certain distinctiveness which now marks it." A suit has been filed to force the college to admit women. Have Mias Agnea. international atyliit, rettyle your coiffure. Expert hair shaping and cutting. Agnes Beauty Shop a;nf:s k. mhmitt B6971. B3122 Hotel Cocnhmker hCut 8 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 19.1',. Interviews Willi . . Ghosts . . h Maurice Johnson Thla Ib one nt a herlea of Irimri,,,,, dial iKiea eoiicenilnu the lilml niiivi-r. ally .Ife. Tim dlaloKiien will ininar i regular bi-weekly Interval. DENJAMIN FRANKLIN notlui D when I asked him if hi; had ideas about a university. "In fact" he said, "in my former existence it pleased me to establish an acail emy in Philadelphia. And, indeed. ;i number of its students became fi.i-. ornaments to their country." "But what was it like?" 1 a.-;ie j, "What do you think a university should teach?" "I think," said Franklin, 'that 1 would have my students learn tn turn from slothfulness as t'lousjh it were Death itself. There will I-., sleeping enough in the grave." "Yes." I said. "God gives all things to inj. - try," he continued. "And inihishv makes all things easy. I thirti; I would let that thought run thru all my students' lessons like a re frain." "And what subjects would yon teach?" I asked. "Many," Franklin answered. ' io be versatile is to have other hands to use when one is struck off l.;! the student know grammar anil mathematics and philosophy. Let him be versed in the sciences But forbid him to stand idle with his knowledge weighing down his pockets. He should put it to gouil and practical use, and he .should use it efficiently." "That is very sound.'' 1 said. 'But what would you have him do in his leisure time?" "Leisure," he said, "is time tor doing something useful. The wi ; man makes his leisure time l:is servant, but to the unwise it is master." "Yes," 1 said. "Expensive follies," he said, "can make leisure pleasant lor the nm ment. but Women and wine, sum? ami deceit. Make the wealth small and the wants great." "That is well put," 1 told him. "But there in another sort of itni versitv. too," he said "What is that. Mr Franklin?" I asked. "It is the school of experience-. ' lie said. "And tho it is a dear school it is the school of many Foi ion's will have no learning in any i-thei." COLUMBUS. O. Oct. 10. (C. X. S.) Prof. Matthew Brown Ham mond, nationally known economi. t of Ohio State university, was being mourned this week following his death which was caused bv ;iea:t ailment with g d looks restored NO F.1G AMOUNT OK MONEY (our moderate! but a BIG im provement in your looks and feeling when we CLEAN them. CIFARS. TY 7 CLEANERS 221 v Roy Wvlt" II Jre Tucker 3 C 2 a sensible package 10 cents FOR PIPES O