TFESDAY. OCTOBER 16. 19.lt. McDonald Snagging Pass In End Zone for Initial Husker Touchdown -II CAMPaJSOCDETY ..a even though the sale of football programs was taken away from them. Hats off to the Corn Cobs ' o THE HIGH LIGHT of this week's events will be the annual Panhellenlc banquet which will be held tonight at 6:30 o'clock at the Cornhusker hotel. Scholarship ratings of the sororities will be presented by the use of a largo five foot book with Barbara Jeary, Alpha Chi Omega, and Dorothy Chapelow, Phi Mu, ac1ng as pages. Mrs. Fred Coleman, na tional president of Mortar Board, will speak on scholarship, Wilbur Chenoweth will play and Jane Mc Laughlin will present readings Mrs. Leon Larimer is general chairman and Mrs. J. A. Mc Eachen, president of the city Pan hellenic, will preside as toastmis tress. Over six hundred active and alumnae members of the twenty-one sororities on the cam pus have made reservations. MARRIED SUNDAY in North Platte were Evelyn Lyone and Allen H. Mann. Mr. Mann is with the civilian rehabilitation division of the state department of voca tional education. The bride is a former student at the university and a member of Phi Mu. They will make their home in Lincoln. ANOTHER MONDAY night! but last night was a little out of the ordinary because Alice Neill, Chi O from South Sioux City, la., and Henry Larson, Sigma Phi Sigma from Dannebrog, passed the candy and cigars. C R E S S A H UTCH ESON of Bradydyville, la., and Arthur E. Anderson of Genoa will be married Nov. XI in Lincoln at the West minster Presbyterian church. Both members of the couple have at tended the university where Mr. Anderson was a member of Phi Delta Theta. DELTA LPSILON wishes to an nounce the pledging of Robert Ad kins of Norfolk. IN HONOR OF Francis Morgan, Alpha Phi, who will marry Bill Holmes, Chi Phi, Oct 20, Francis Jane McAvoy and Jasmine Dunn will entertain at a personal shower this evening at the Alpha Phi house. SIGMA XI, national scholastic fraternity of the sciences, held a meeting last night in Morrill hall at 7:30 o'clock. Professor Carl M. Duff of the Applied Mechanics de partment spoke on the "Construc tion of Highways" In Nebraska, He Well, the hectic afternoon is over, 35.000 loyal Nebraska fans, quite well positive that the Husk ers were in for a tough time with the invading Hawkeyes, cheered in a mightv volume that echoed from the sandhills to the Missouri and back. For Nebraska's Cornhusk ers, inexperienced, given a first class rating as undsrdogs, with the sport scribes hollering through the printed word what a team Iowa had and how badly they were going to beat Nebraska, came through to a 14 to 13 victory over the surprise team of the Big Ten, and a ranking contender for na tional honors. Very doubtless, few of the 35,000 thought Nebraska had a chance. There were a few loyal Nebras kans, willing to stake ft small board on the Scarlet and Cream, but they did not form a majority, or even a suitable minority. No, the opinion of the state or Nebraska was mostly to the effect that the Bible coached warriors would bow to an invading horde for the first time since 1930. But that Bible-coached team had very definite idea of its own, and the Bible Sophomores, some of them starting their first game as red liveried gridaters. capitalized on those ideas, and upset the mighty Hawks in a victory that went thundering through the foot ball circles of the nation. To the Sophs goes a large por tion of the glory. Lloyd Cardwell, Sam Francis. Ron Douglas, Lester McDonald, first year men, all of them, provided the sparkle and punch of the Husker attack, out shining the highly touted Black and Gold. Le McDonald "Lanky Les" the 6 feet 4 inch Grand Island erd turned in an exceptional perform ance in bis first start as an end. Mac scored the first touchdown, snagging a 13 yard toss from Chief Bauer. He caught other passes during the afternoon, but where be really shone, really brought out the activeness and ingenuity of a great end was cm the defensive end of the play. Ozzie Simmons la a great baifback, perhaps is destined to be one of the greatest that ever lived. But Ozste Sim mons cant go places without In terference. Three men usually composed the blocking squad to front of tne dusky fiah, but even those three, excellent blockers as they are Fisher. Hoover, and P ORTj Static Typeivriiers n n..kN frrr ,w.t.l rell rats payments. BZ17. 7cotuU Typc'-criier Co. ISO N.. 18 M. -lno.n. N.b'- rE CORN COBS HAVE PROVEN their worth! Saturday night mem bers of the organization anxiously Matched the cars collect in front of the coliseum. By ten o'clock it looked as if the part' would be a success. At ten thirty there was no doubt about it. Six hundred couples jammed the floor and cheered Red Perkins on to bigger, better, and hotter music while he insisted he was keeping his tunes in the kitchen warming them up. And so our men's pep organi zation has a future to look forward to WHAT'S DOING Tuesday, Chaperons club, Kappa Sig ma house Mrs. Chauncey Pal mer Smith, hostess. Panhellenic banquet. Corn husker hotel, 6:30 o'clock. Thursday. Kappa Delta mothers club, dessert luncheon, chapter house, 1:30 p. m. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, moth ers club, chapter house, 2:30 o'clock. Friday. Dean and Mrs. F. E. Henzlik, reception, 8 until 10 p. m. Phi Mu mothers club, 1 1 o'clock lucheon, chapter bouse. Saturday. Mu Phi Epsilon alumnae club, 1 o'clock luncheon with Miss Sarah Apperson. showed slides and moving pictures of work done in the past and dis cussed problems now in progress. The executive committee was in charge of arrangements. SALLY EHLERS and Jean Rogers were both taken to the Lincoln General hospital yesterday morning to be put under observa tion for appendicitis. MONDAY NIGHT ALPHA Chi O actives and alumnae met at an informal dinner honoring founders day. Many of those present came in costumes of the year of the founding, 1885, and after the din ner more than 100 guests were en tertained at an appropriate pro gram. The committee in charge of the affair was composed of Martha Hershey, Helen Nesbit, Betty Bar rows, Alice Jourgenson, Mrs. Dwight McVicker, Mrs. Harold Holtz, Mrs. John A gee, Mrs. Theo dore Bullock and Mrs. L. E. Fin ney. THE CHAPERONES club will hold its first meeting of the year, a tea, a the Kappa Sig house at 2:30 this afternoon with Mrs. Palmer Smith as hostess. Plans will be dis cussed for future meetings. Those on the committee In charge are: Mrs. Gertrude Adams, Mrs. Pearl Petermichel. Mrs. Felsana Daniels, Mrs. Coral Bentley, and Mrs. Sue Kusnneth. The Chaperones club is composed of all the housemothers on the campus. Crayne hit at McDonald and fell sprawling to the turf, with Mac still on his feet and making the tackle. There was some question among Nebraska fans as to Mc Donald's prowress as a defensive end. He has removed those doubts from every mind in as ex ceptional a piece of end work as has ever been seen on Memorial Stadium turf. Sam Francis found himself Sat urday, and that was anything but good news for Iowa. Big Sam plunged and crashed his way thru the line for gains that figured so prominently in the second Husker scoring drive, passed for one of the longest gains in the first, and kicked the two points after touch down for the winning margin. Be sides this, his backing up the line was worthy of a senior instead of a sophomore. His knees driving up and down like two pistons, he smashed the center of the Iowa line, and the Old Gold bent, sagged and finally broke to let the Scarlet fullback slip thru for precious yardage. But Sam's outstanding play of the day was a quick kick, a punt from short formation that traveled far over Oszie Simmons' head and landed in the end zone from the midfield stripe. Evidently the big boy has gotten over those sopho more Jitters which marred his per formances in the Wyoming and Minnesota games, and now he's on the high road to success. Lloyd Cardwell provided much A BUY INDEPENDENT GAS 313 Holms "4 w Thoae Thing: for Halloween Party Q can oe bad at Georges. You will be able to se Q led front a large and attractive line. fmrty Fmrnrt Hmuu RnwctimM Bids mmd Mmut "Lat Oasrpt Da M" MSMM vat A mm. xutm Cal' tha J.uc.ky Thlrtaanf" 1tJ I Movie Directory STUART (Mat. 25c; Nite 0c) Now Showing: "MADAME DU BARRY" with Dolores Del Rio, Reginald Owen. Victor .Tory, Veree Teasdale. Thelma Todd Patsy Kelly Comedy. LINCOLN (Mat. 15c; Nite 25c) "GIFT OF GAB" with 30 stars of stage, soreon and radio, plus "CARTOON LAND REVUE" with 4 complete cartoons: Mick ey Mouse, Popeye. Betty Boop and Silly Symphony: ORPHEUM (Mat. 15c; Nite 25c) Philo Vanre'B "DRAGON MUR DER CASE" with Warren Wil liam, Margaret Lindsay. Lyl Talbot. COLONIAL (Mat. 10c; Nite 15c) Now Showing: "DOWN TO THEIR LAST YACHT" with Polly Moran, Mary Boland and Ned Sparks. LIBERTY (10c Any Time) Now Showing: Janet Gaynor in "ADORABLE." SUN (Mat. 10c; Nite 15c) New Showing: ANN VICKERS and "COME ON MARINES." impetus to the Husker attack, both offensively and defensively. Sev eral times the speedy one made tackles that saved touchdowns, and his running left nothing to be de sired on the part of the Nebraska fans. But he was one big head ache to Iowa! Those off -tackle jaunts just wouldn't be stopped, and he outgained Oze Simmons on yardage from the line of scrim mage. Cardy took over a new task when he was sent to run back punts, the position left open by the involuntary retirement or jerry LaNoue, and he performed in a creditable manner, twisting and twirling away from dangerous tacklers, and counting on sheer mm ArraM - CwnmiW WeC &Kdfjt if yamV VaiV '..!: :Vf f Tlw Cr)fotWw Crop driving power when it seemed as if he were almost stopped. But these are only a few of the stars who figured so brilliantly for the Scarlet. No list would be com plete without columns and columns of space devoted to Ron Douglas, the Crete youngster starting his first major game, who held down his halfback position like a vet eran; Bernard Scherer, who turned Oze Simmons in from the right flank, and made many of the tackles himself, once tackling Sim mons from behind; Franklin Meier, who stonewalled Crayne at center, bearing the brunt of the offensive thrusts at the middle of the Husk er line; Ladas Hubka and James Hcldt, the two stellar guards, ever alert, ever fighting to bring down the Black jerseyed back who want ed through so badly, hitting hard and with deadly accuracy to set down the Hawks; Russell Thomp son and Carroll Reese, reversing previous form to provide the Husk ers with two staunch and true tackles, whose defensive ability just couldn't be questioned; Chief Bauer, who directed the Husker jaunts into Iowa lanes, and Glenn Skewes, who smashed and punted for the Biblemen so exceptionally during the first quarter. But to devote the amount of space to these men that they really deserve is an impossibility, at least at the present time. Let it suffice to say that they conducted themselves as SALON CONTINENTAL Hair Re-Styling FREE COXSULTATIOX Beauty Shop Floor Two Phone B3214 a m tni Cnrnhnskprs. with the Corn husker spirit, and as a credit to the Scarlet and the Cream, a team not individuals. Snorts finshps: Nebraska was taking no chances with this boy Simmons. . . . Very few punts were within his reach, the Huskers often sacrificing punt yardage to keep tVio hull vitRiri V . . But thev learned their lesson and they learned it well when, on tne ursi mint Simmons came back 35 yards, after it seemed that he was surelv stopped. . . . The ausny one had little chance, all afternoon. . . . Nice to contemplate that the Husker backfield scoring both touchdowns was composed of three Sophomores ana a junioi. Prost)ects look rosy for a cou ple of years to come. . . . These frosh aren't as weak as many be lieved when the varsity rang up a 71 to 0 count. . . . w eir s Diue-ciau hnvs have shown the varsity some tough times in scrimmage. . . . They took the "B" team o to u, too, outplaying their more experi enced rivals. . . . Ron Douglas, of Crete, shows what spirit can do. . . . W hen tne ursi cm oi mu oca rle Doue was holding down the fullback's post on the B team. ... in we ursi game OUT Wednesday Bur your copy of lSrhraka Humor Magazine for only II 5' Per copy Vou get in Luckies the finest Turkish and Domestic tobaccos that money can buy only the clean center leaves for these are the mild est leaves they cost more they taste better. 'our throat he was such an outstanding star that he was promoted to the var sity. . . . Saturday he started as the regular halfback, and played most of the game. . . . isow ne is well on his way to a major letter and Husker stardom. . . . tTODamy no man in tne Husxer oacKiieia follows interference so well as does Glenn Skewes, the Imperial red head. A gain of 424 in fall quarter registration at Iowa State college over that of a vear ago is shown in the attendance figures released by the registrar. President Bizzell of Oklahoma university attacked week-night dating with vigor Monday night when he entered a campus shop WHAT? 0 Good Taste it s toasted protection -aaintt irritation Courteay Sunday Journal Star and ordered home mor! than 300 dates who were listening to a scheduled Monday night entertain ment program. Fifty types of Chrysanthemums are now in bloom in the Iowa State college formal gardens. They were sent by the Bureau of Plant Industry of the United States Department of Agricul ture. DEW DROP INN 1133 H St. Board and Room for Men $10.00 per Month 01.-i. finished at the A Evans for only Yessir, send them in a rough dry bundle. 5 lbs. for 49c. Keep cat Wear an Evans ironed hhirt. 'J.'. 7 f atainst cough