VOL. XXVIII NO. 50 lilAYTILT E 'Bo' McMillin's Wildca4s Invade Comhuskerdom With Vengeance INJURIES HIT HUSKERS In Spite of East Trip and Army Drubbing, Huskers Have Slight Edge This afternoon at 2:00 o'clock the Nebraska Cornhuskers meet Couch "IJo" McMillin's Kansas Ag pie Wildcats on Memorial Stadium fluid for tho gridiron finale of 11)28. Nebraska now leads the Rig Six conference and to win this name against to eam from Manhattan would cinch the conference football champlonHhlp with a perfect season for the Scarlet and Cream. Kansas Aggies will take the field against the Huskers this afternoon in an attempt to gain the honor of being the first football eleven in the Hig Six to fitop the "power house" in conference games. Hast ing last week, the Aggie eleven Is in top-notch condition lor the llearcmen and hope to turn back the onslaught that the Scarlet has unloosed on conference toes throughout the season. Except Stiff Battle Returning from a hard game at West Point with the Army eleen last week, the Huskers have only had two practice sessions on the home sod and are just in the kink removing stage as the Turkey day classic draws near. The Nebraska coaching staff is expecting a great battle today from McMillin's Wild cat eleven and from the showing of the Huskera in the two practice drills, Indications are that the Qoarlat lu nnt In the hest of form for the closing game. Kansas Aggies have never turned back a team wearing the colors of Nebraska. In the long years that the two elevens have battled on the gridiron, the closest a Manhattan team ever came to beating Ne braska was a scoreless tie in the conference game three years ago at Manhattan. Today the Aggie game looms as the big game on the Hunker schedule. It means victory In the first football season of tho Big Six conference and alttho a de feat from the hands of the Wild cats would not take the champion ship from Nebraska, it would put the first place honors Into a tin with Missouri. Bugaboo Hits The long trip back east to West Point has left the Nebraska team weary and by virtue of the fact that, the Cadet eleven handed Nebraska Its first defeat of the season, has rather taken the edge off of things In the camp of the mighty Hunker eleven. To turn back the Aggies this afternoon on Memorial Sta dium field is the greatest task of the 1928 season. The long sched ule has had its erferl on the team and the Injury jinx has crept into the Husker squad since the game at West Point. Although the Injury list is not (treat, three regular men on the pquad are nursing minor bruises from the bombardment at the Continued on I'iikc . International Relations Series Will Begin December 5 World Forum meetings will be (tin again Wednesday. December 5, at tho Nebraskan hotel, with a ser ies of three talks on the general cubject of International relations. Hr. F. M. Kllng, professor of European History at the Univer sity, will give the address of De comber 5 on "The Significance of the Kellogg Peace Pact." Prof. Fling Is a thorough student, of in ternational relations, and has had much experience in the study of this subject. Mr. Hanna Fam. a native Egyp tlan. will give the lalk for the second meeting in December. Mr.. Fam has Just completed graduate work In the University of Chicago. He will visit In Lincoln a few days before goinlng on to take up Y. M. C A. work. Mr. Ham's topic is not definitely known but will be concerned with his native country and Its relation to the other coun tries. Ilecause of Herbert Hoover's trip to South America, It was thought that one of the meetings should deal with Latin America. However, final arrangements have nut been made yet. The series of meetings starting next week mark the second gen eral group this year. The first Croup was completed a few weeks ago and was on the subject of the political situation. The policies of 'he three political parties, repub lican, democrat, and socialist, ere discussed. World forum meetings are held In order to give the students a chance to learn more of subjects of current interest. A luncheon 'osting Zoc precedes the speech, and the i rograni is over in time tor 1 o'clock classes. The attend ance so far this year has been ex ceptionally good. WILL DETERMIN BIG SIX WINNER FORUM WILL RESUME MEETINGS NEXT WEEK Goes to Egypt ,A-tP -KKrS, V if t tr4? if I A." v Ji C. Steele Holcombe, Nebraska graduate, who is doing active Y. M. C. A. work in thu Far East. I C. Steele Holcombe, '16, Is Transferred to Assuit Headquarters HAYES PRAISES EFFORTS C. Steein Holcombe. 'Irt, has been transferred to an important Y. M. C. A. post at Assuit, Kgypt, according to information recehed at the office of the campus organ ization. Since graduating from the ('niver1;. (1f ,Yhra.ia, where he was a member of Alpha Theta Chi and Phi Helta Phi fraternities. Mr. ll'dcoiiibe has hern active in Chris tian cmleaor In Kgypt. After fining in the balloon servico during the war, Mr. Hol combe was called by the foreign department to a' position in Kgypt and, after some training at Silver May, sailed for Cairo. For a time he was connected with the British army camp on the Suez canal but was later transferred to Alexan dria, where his first work with Kgyptlans began. Was Boys' Secretary Soon after the Y. M. C. A. prop erty was purchased in 1921, Mr. Holcombe became social creUirer. In this work, he found his Intimate contacts with the young men to bo most profitable. In order to get a larger background of the Moham medan world, Mr. Holcombe spent a summer in Palestine' and Syria. In 1927, Mr. Holcombe spent most of his time as boys' secre, tary, devoting his lime to the boys anil younger students who came to the foreign extension of the Y. M. C. A. With his transference to As suit, two hundred miles up the Nile river from Cairo. Mr. Hol combe will have a chance to de- Cnntlmli-il on I'iiki Pictures Are Employed as Part of Sixteen New Courses The University extension service Is making an Innovation this year In the study of history. The mo tion picture Is used to depict his torical scenes In a class which meets each Tuesday evening In Nebraska hall auditorium. The name of the course is Ch'-onlcles of America. At each class meeting a differ ent historical scene is depicted and the class studies it from an outline which Is supplied by the history department. Some of the subjects for the episodes are Co lumbus, Jamestown, the Pilgrims, the Puritans. Peter Stuyvesant and others of this type. Another Innovation made this year by the Extension division Is the introduction of a course In Up reading. This class meets Tues days and Fridays in the former museum building. Department Grows The Extension service has been growing steadily In both tho num ber of courses offered and number of students according to A. A. Keed, director. Sixteen new courses are offered this year. These are in business law, the classics, educational psychology, argumentation, German, philoso phy and the two previously men tioned. In the scholastic year 1927-28 the Extension division served 2179 correspondence students. In addi tion there was a large number of students who attended night classes which are under the Ex tension department. Mr. Heed es timates that the enrollment this year is much larger than last. In 1912 the enrollment in this service was only 149 but since then the growth lias noen rapiu and steadv. The enrollment in 11(22 was 1441. lu nil probabilities it "will be tw ice that this year. The students are located in all parts of the state and nation. There are some in every county except one, in Nebraska. Of the total number of students last year 1911 were in the state while others were mostly from th mi(i" die west. There were, however, ten in California, three in Texas, three in New York and In practi cally every . other state in the union. LINCOLN, INKHKASKA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1928 'ROYAL REVUE' POPULAR GO-ED Nebraska Sweetheart Will Appear Before Student Body Today TRADITION ESTABLISHED Curiosity and Guessing Come to an End This Morning Curiosity and guesMng contests regarding the "Sweetheart, of Ne braska," who was chosen by tho I'.nversliy men In an election held Friday, November 2,1, but whose identity has been kept a secret, will leach their end this morning when "the most popular co-ed" is coro nated during "King Kosmet's Itoyal Revue" at the Orphettm theater. Kosmet Kluh conceived the Idea that tin university should have its sweetheart and sponsored the re cent elect ior. lor the office In w hich nil men students of the university were eligible to participate. Any co-ed in any college of the Univer sity of Nebraska was declared eligi ble lor the office. Immediately following the elec tion announcement sororities and other feminine campus organiza tions began to devise a plan by which their favorite could acquire the majority of the masculine votes on the campus. Members of the College of Law announced that they were hacking one of their own classmates. Electioneering Is Heavy. Electioneering was at high pitch throughout the day of the election. No nominations were made for the office and so names appeared on the ballot. Men who eamo to cast their vote in the ballot box which resided withiu the Lincoln the ater's automobile "Ark" found a multitude of co-eds around the poll ing place ready to beseech them for votes in favor of the candidates whom they were backing. From 9 o'clock in the morning until 4 o'clock in the afternoon when the polling place closed this commo tion continued. All co-eds seemed eager to obtain the office which placed the value Cnnllnilrcl on l'nge 2. Weather Man Say's Snow for Today's Game When the Cornhuskers meet the Kansas Aggies today in the Tur key day classic of Nebraska the weather will be somewhat differ ent from that of a year ago. Last year tho weather was crisp but the sky was clear and in short was an ideal football day for both players and spectators. This year's Thanks ghing game, according to the U. S. weather bureau is to be decidedly different. The forecast for Lincoln is prob ably rain followed by snow and a lowering of temperature. Cold and snowy weather will cut the atten dance considerably and it will be a bad day especially from the view point of tho spectators. The team will not be hampered by a wet field as the playing field lays under a thick coat of straw. ATTENDANCE TODAY MAY SET NEW MARK Between 15,000 and 16,000 peo ple will be in the stands today when the Cornhuskers clash with the Wildcats, Is the belief of John K. Selleck, business manager of athletics. The estimate Is made with the provision that the weath er is favorable. Even with the relatively small attendance anticipated, Mr. Selleck was certain that the close of this season will establish a new- mark for numbers of people who watched the Huskers play in any one sea son. Definite figures are not yet available for publication, but the number of spectators at Nebraska games this year will far outnum ber those of any previous season. PRESENTS I T Seven Huskers Close Dazzling Careers As 1928 Season Ends (By Jack Elliott) This afternoon when the Ne braska Cornhuskers line up against the Kansas Aggies, seven Husker football warriors will be playing their last for the Scarlet and Cream. Seven men who have fought for the Cornhusker school on the gridiron for three years. Leading the list of men who will don the scar ' for the last time is Co-Captain 'ilue Howell, one of tho greatest .ullbacks that Ne braska football has ever seen. Blue has played In the Cornhusker backfleld for three years and leaver, a place in the Nebraska backflelfl that will be hard to fill when the Huskers line up for the first season practice next fall. Howell's work as a line plunger and interference runner are the two outstanding features in the Rig Six conference. Was Presnell'i Partner Last year Howell played an in terference game for Glen Presmll and brought a great deal of com ment from sport critics through out the country on his ability to take the opposing men out of the path of the runner. This year Blue L. E. Aylsworth Praises Sydney Debating Team Australian debaters, In tho de bate with Nebraska Tuesday night, showed a breadth of view anil knowledge of government which was commendable in the opinion of L. E. Aylsworth, professor of political science. He also com mended their easy style of speak ing mixed with hits of sarcur.ru and humor. Tho Nebraska case in the de bate with th:j University of Syd ney was based on three conten tln? First they showed that the t! ". ilnant tend. Miry In government was toward the federal form. They lemonst rated why the federal sys tem of government required a bi cameral legislature with equal houses and that the parliamentary government was possible only when one house In a bicameral legislature Is dominant. They hoped to prove by. I his that a par liamentary systeei and a federal system are Incompatible. Profesor Aylsworth commended the Nebraska debaters on their argument, but pointed out a weak ness In it, In that they overem phasized the tendency toward the federal form. The tendency In America bus been toward nation alism rather lhan federalism, he said. Visitors Style Is Lively The Australians style of debato i v-'ry interesting and attractive and helps to enliven the debate. Professor Aylsworth's only criti cism was that t.i."v did not talk loud enough and clear enough to be heard by the entire audience. A great many in the audience had great, difficulty In understanding them. This was partly due to the poor acoustics of the Coliseum. The Sydney debaters spent a good deal of time at thn begin ning of their speeches in what Americans would call useless talk. The Nobraskaas set about Im mediately to prove their case and drive through their main conten tions. Mr. Aylsworth pointed out that, this is a characteristic of Americans as contrasted with for eigners. Americans are obsessed with that overwhelming desire to win. I Men and Women Will Shoot In Andrews Hall This , Season The new indoor target range in Andrews hall opens Monday after noon. At present only girls and the varsity ritie team will practice. Over fifty girls af various sorori ties have been waiting for several weeks for a chance to shoot. Ser geant C. F. McGimsey of the R. O. T. C. department Instructed them In preliminary work In rifle mark manship. He will give them the final instruction in shooting be tween three and four thirty o'clock next week. All girls should report in groups for this Instruction. The men's varsity rifle team will practice In the afternoons between one and three o'clock. Some have already been shooting and have been turning in high score. Mer hlll Flood, '29, Lincoln, fired three "possibles" In the prone position, Monday afternoon. The Lincoln chapter of the Na tional Rifle association uses the gallery on 'Wednesday evenings. Last night a match was shot off between the Lincoln club and tho national guards. Dean Sealock of the Teachers college will speak to PI Lambda Theta. Teachers college honorary sorority, Tuesday December 4. The subject of Dean Sealock's talk will bo "Moral Education." IS'ebraskan Will !ot Appear Over Vacation Due to Thanksgiving vaca tion, there will be no Issues of The Dally Nebraskan on Fri day and Sunday. The next Is sue will be delivered Tuesday morning. Reporters are asked to get assignments Monday afternoon, as usual. has changed his tactics and his main job is driving the line for the Husker eleven and pounding the forward wall until he wears It down. Blue opened the 1A28 season for the Cornhuskers at Iowa State on October 6 when he crossed the goal line for the first touchdown of the year and since, that date has crossed many goal lines. To day he is only headed In the scor. Ing column by Clair Sloan. Tho two backs have taken all the hon ors in Big S'x individual scoring. Howell has in .de all his points from touchdowns and has now rolled jnp a total of 30 points. The second man to don the Ne braska football colors for the last tine is the other Husker cap tain, Elmer Holm, guard in the Nebraska line. Holm came to Ne braska from Omaha and has held a regular position In the scarlet line for three years. He is a tower of strength on defense and very seldom does a back go through Elmer's side of the Nebraska line. On offense, Coach Bearg says, "he is one of the greatest I have ever seen and plays a heady game, is smart, quick to figure out the, op LEADS FOR NEXT PLAYERS DRAMA ARE ANNOUNCED Cornelia Ayrcs and Lerner Will Head Cast for 'The Outsider' STAGED DECEMBER 10-15 Blind Author Mixes Tears And Laughter in Her Great Epic With Cornelia Ay res and VV. Zol ley Lerner, school of fine arts sen iors in the leading roles, the Uni versity Players will present "The Outsider," the three act comedy drama by Dorothy Ilrandon during the week of December 10 to 15 as their third seasonal production. "The Outsider" is an outstanding play of Its type, conveying an Idea Keldom voiced In modern comedies. H played an entire year in London where it originated and also ran for a year on Broadway with huge box office success. Dorothy Brandon Is Author. Dorothy Brandon, the author of this play, is an English girl, crip pled all her life, and as this was the first work of her pen in regard to play writing, seems to have bared her soul In the lesson this play leaches. The play Js as uuch educational in nature as it is amus ing and presents opportunities for tea s, resultlig from the pathos in the lives it presents. The play has to deal with the plight of a young woman who has been crippled from childhood. Her father, who Pi an eminent surgeon, and all his associates In the Itoyal Medical college, pronounce the girl incurable. The young woman, J.alage, the part played by Miss Ayres, has become a composer of some repute, but she desires the fullness of life that is given to the normal woman. 'Ragatzy' Zolley Lerner There enters Ragatzy, the part to be played by Mr. Lerner, a medi cal practitioner outside the associa tion of physicians and surgeons, and described by one of the critics as "a man whom God made a physi- Cnntinnrd on I'ner . Retiring Gridsters, Bearg Make Speeches Before Small Gathering Making their last appearance be fore Nebraska students at a rally, Co-Captains Howell and Holm, Dan McMullen, and Cliff Ashburn spoke at the final grid rally of the season at the Coliseum last night. A small crowd of students were present for the final pep exhibition of the sea son. Coach Earnest E. Bearg also spoke to the assemblage of stu dents and football enthusiasts. Opinions that the game with the Kansas Aggie team today wna go ing to be no set-up characterized the football speeches. Coach Hearg expressed the opinion that the Hus kers were entering the game today with a worn-out and fagged team, and that the Cornhusker spirit and enthusiasm would be an important factor In the winning of the last game of the season. The four play ers who talked foretold a Husker victory, not discounting the Aggies, however. Frederick Daly presided at the rally. About two doen players as sembled on the stage for the last time this year. Of the seven Hus kers playing their last game, Holm, Howell, Ashburn and McMullen spoke. Chick Dox led the small gather ing In yells. A sprinkling of Tassels and Corn Cobs was evident. Oregon State College Students taking military training at Oregon State College cost the government 147.97 each, according to figures as compiled by army officers. posing plays and Is a real Ne braska football captain." Next year Holm's place in the line will be vacant and the coach ing staff at the Husker school will have a big Job in the fall to fill that place in the Scarlet forward wall that has been ?o abiy filled by Co-Captain Elmer Holm for the past three seasons. Hard Place to Fill This afternoon at 2 o'clock Co Captain Elmer Holm will wear the Scarlet and Cream in his final game. His career on the Cornhus ker football team has bfen a bril liant one and today it comes to a close as the mighty Cornhusker team closes the 1928 gridiron sea son and one of the most success ful seasons in the history of Ne braska. The third man to leave thf Hus kers next year is Dan McMullen, guard on the other side of the Nebraska line. McMullen Is rated as a guard of All-America caliber and has played a great brand of ball for Nebraska during his three years with Nebraska. "Mac", as he Is known to his fellow team mates and to students on the cam- Continiml on Fur S. Leaders Demand Full Cheer Section Today In order to insure a full cheering section for today's game, students who have tick ets lu the section but who can n.it bo present are requested to dispose of their tickets to someone who can be present. Today's game between Nebraska-Kansas Aggies Is the last one of tho season and it Is desirable that. a. good showing he made by the chewing, sec tion. A good program of stunla, such as those carried out during the entire season, will be put on. These stunts depend, however, upon a packed section. A few vacant seats can spoil the effect, of the en tile stunt. INTEREST IN DEBATE Radio Only Communication Between Kansas Aggies And Nebraskans OVER KF0R TOMORROW Nebraska high school debaters are-showing considerable interest In the debate to he given over KFOR tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock, when a team from the Kansas Agricultural college will meet a special Nebraska team composed of Walter Huber, Lloyd L. Speer, and Nathan Levy. The question used by the high schools of Nebiaska and near-by states ,and to be used by the var sity debaters, Is, "The English Cabinet Form of Government Is Preferable to the Presidential form of the United States." This la the same general topic n.i used last Tuesday night, in the debate with the Sydney, Australia, team, but the wording has been made to conform with that used lu the state. No Studio Audience No audience will be present at the studio, but many are expected to listen In. Announcement of the broadcasting was made at the de bate Tuesday night. Broadcasting of the Sydney debate couid not be arranged. A similar debate be tween Kansas university and Kan sas Agricultural college will be broadcast by KSAC at Manhattan on Dec. 13. Nebraska will use three seas oned men in the debate. Huber had considerable work at Techni cal high school in Omaha, and some university work. He is a member of Sigma Pi, forensic so ciety. Speer, a graduate of Superior high Bchool, had debate work then, and has debated a number of times at the university. He Is a pre-law student. Levy debated forty times during his course at Hastings high school, and was a member of the high school championship team two years ago. He was the winner of the debate scholarship at Midland in the tournament held In 1927. Turkey Day Is Fun, Food and Football Time Thanksgiving! The day when spirits are high, and most of Ne braksa's co-eds and he-men flock home for that big dinner and a long awaited visit with the family. When Miles Standish, Prlscllla and the other Pilgrim cohorts held open house to the Indians on the front lawn, no thought was given as to what Nebraska students would be doing 300 years after. No one cared whether Howell and Holm were fighting their last for the old Uni. With the invention of the auto mobile, and the quest for Higher ed ucation we have civilization and Nehraska University. Thanksgiving dinners and Kosmet shows. But closer than that, almost correla tive with the Idea of Thanksgiving is the annual football tussle. Kaggiet Evade Cellar. Today, two squads of football warriors are forsaking the turkey and cranberries at noon for a big game. Two teams of men will be fighting against each other, one for championship recognition, the other against a cellar position and with an effort to beat the team that gave the Army mule such a workout. Thanksgiving seems to be a time in every student's life when he may chuck the books, enjoy a good foot ball game, eat to his heart's con tent (and not at any fraternity table), and travel homeward to spend a few days vacation. It is the let-up from a football season, successful as measured by the team and the support given It by the student body. Aside from the serious aspects of the gala day, Nebraska students have an opportunity to be merry. Dads are pleaded with and be sceched for new suits, fur coats and formats. Accounts are made to questioning fathers where tbts ten bucks went to, and what happened to the heavy woolens that were sent from home to keep son or daughter warm during the cold Lin coln blasts. However, regardless of the good time for the University students, the quantity of food stored away, a Joyful bunch comes back for those Monday morning eight o'clocks, most of them without their lessons, but all with that cheerful, fighting spirit manifested by loyal Cornhuskers. 5 CENTS. TO PILLED HOUSE j Box Office Reports Disclose Most Seats for Review ! Arc Purchased ! MATERIAL HAS VARIETY Final Rehearsal Brings Out Promising Talent for Performance Win n King Kosmet's lloyal Re vue opens at 'J o'clock this morning at the Orphtuiii theater, it will b"i playing to a capacity audience. This announcement was made late last night by Austin Sturde.ant, di rector of ticket tales lor the Ko.-i-met Kluh production. More than one thousand tickets have been sold, leaving only a few In the balcony available for pur chase. The majority of the tickets were sold yesterday morning when 111 clraiertilties and sororities re sen ed them In block sections. Re served seats for the main floor ami balcony have been selling for fifty cents. The annual Thanksgiving morn ing show of the. Kosmet Kluh w hich will go on the boards this morning contains diversified entertainment assembled by the fraternities, so rorities and Individuals of the Uni versity. A huge rally boosting the afternoon football tilt with the Kansas Aggies will be conducted by Chick Dox, the varsity yell king. Acts Are Aces From the opening of the show, in which the King and Queen of Kos met are featured, to the closing number when Nebraska's Sweet heart will be coronated as the Queen of Kosmet, the show is packed with songs, 'dances, wibe cracklug dialogues and other enter tainment that goes to make up a Thanksgiving show. Some of the acts featured in the revuo are the Delta Gamma and Sigma Chi skit and the Kappa Kap pa Gamma and Alpha Tau Omega presentation. The Delta Gamma act is built around several dancing numbers which were recently fea tured in Broadway productions. A chorus, with Marcllle Mathews and Ralph Ireland starring, will en deavor to demonstrate the "Wob baly Walk," the sensation which has been gripping New York dancers. Has Stag Football The Alpha Omlcron PI act will feature a football team, cleverly costumed and coached in the art of playing football, running forma tions and dancing to the music of Beck's orchestra. Henry Nestor and Faye Williams have been dis covered as having a great deal of ability in their solo dancing, ac cording to word given out by the Kosmet Klub, and will present their selections in connection with the Alpha Omicron Pi and Phi Gamma Delta production. That blues singer that has been referred to you in Kosinet Klub write ups as "a sensation" will be no other than Olive Stageman, Alpha Chi Omega, who will sing her way into favor with the audi ence with "Some One of These Days," and "I Can't Give You Anything But Love." Alpha Phi and Kappa Sigma are presenting their act with the set- Cnnt tailed on Face 3. Thirty-Eight of Faculty Win Coveted Places in the Newest Book Each year, in the publication, "Who's Who in America," which contains a list of famous people from every part of the United States, is a list of famous Lincoln people. The greater part of thi3 Lincoln list is made up of Univer sity of Nebraska faculty members. This year, thirty-eight, faculty members are listed in "Who's Who in America." A brief account of their lives as well as a summary of their achievements is included in the account beside their names. A list follows: List Is Long. S. Avery, chancellor-emeritus; L. E. Aylsworth, professor of political science; Erwln II. Bar bour, professor of geology; N. A. Bengst.on, professor of geology and geography; M. J. Bllsh, professor of agricultural chemistry; H. TI Bradford, professor of vocational education; Lawrence Brunei-, professor of entomology, absent on leave; E. A. Burnett, chancellor; A. L. Candy, professor of mathematics; Geo. R. Chatburn, professor of applied me chanics and machine design; Robt. P. Crawford, professor of agricul tural journalism; H. G. Demiug, professor of chemistry; Gilbert H. Doane, librarian; C. C. Engberg, prof-ssor of applied mechanics. dlln J. Ferguson, deau of the col lege of engineering; Fred Af. Fling, professor of European history; Charles Fordyce, professor of edu cational measuremmts and re search; Lawrence Fossler, profes sor of germanic languages; Prosser H. Frye, professor of English; Frank E. Henzlik. professor of school administration; John D. Hicks, professor of American his tory. Herman G. James, dean of the C outlniM-l oil 1'uga I'RICK CAST IN KOSMET SHOW WILL PLAY V J 1