1 r J I t A T e t ? v 1 ! SUNDAY. NOVBfllKK fi. Wo serve the best Plate Lunch IN LINCOLN Howerter's Lunch AND 6ANDWICH SHOP 143 North Twelfth St. LEARN TO DANCE Can trach you to lead In one lesson. Guarantee to teaoh you In prlvutn leinoiu. Clamiu avary Monday, Wed nesday and Saturday afternoon. I'rlv it lesaona mornlnga, atternuoni and evenings. MRS. LUELLA WILLIAMS Very Select Private Studio IT-4268 1220 I) Temple Theatre Sat. Matinee and Evening' NOV. 14 Under the Auspices of The Unive:s.ty Players University of Nebraska J a mvs It. I'liml' ir( sciitx MAURICE BROWNE (Producer of "Journey's End"i in THE UNKNOWN WARRIOR 14 "The finest play about the wnr yet written." London Tele graph. . with Tiokets $3.00, Tickets on One Reckless KISS! One Reckless MOMENT One Reckless HOUR Then a lifetime of REGRETS! Beautiful young viva, clous Her only fault she loved too well) Her love lived ?.n hour her penalty laited a lifetime HOUR Act AD JONES SkyH " ) MhnfKiiu I A ti Jill UiUai : HE FOBWA !a"wH STATE HE mm. mm mm He wb: mm. w- m V .. The Supreme The Artist of HELEN Many Nc Star 1 . SIM Irtateu can nrr Lewit Stone, . Q -Jf Lennox Pawle, Jesn ? ;JAi V: '.; .i' ZaT. Hertholt. Marie Preml ': S . ' f" t V-S- Cliff Edward. I- Kli the sin QMtm 1' " 11 Ad'': d V. ' Zazu Pi:.s-Tl;ema Todd (. "Lef. Do Something- 4lSWL 'A "MICKEY MOUSE" TICHTING TO LIVE" A Thrilling Sea Novelty 1931. CHEMICAL CROUP WILL HOLD OPEN MEETING NOV. 19 Thursday evening, Nov.' 10, the chemical engineering: society will conduct an open meeting In Chem istry hall ut which films will be shown depicting the gasi.line and lubrication Industry. Prof. C. J. Frankfurter rf the chemistry de partment will lecture in conjunc tion with the plantation of the films. The films are being secured through the bureau of mines with stations at PlUalmrg and Minne apolis. The public is invited. Rosalinda Fuller $2.00 Student Ratss $1.00 Sale at Latsch Brcs. CONRAD NAGEL WARNER JOAN SLONDELL WAITER BYRON JOE DONAHUE DOROTHY PETERSON FCOTEALL F -RD PASS j Pathe News Supreme Them All! HAYES Ay? have been burn !o the A'- -- Find of the Talkies Kmnrctt of r .Jp' Artiurvand Fmoion..;;pp;ir.cd fc .VtiwWJ fretfntrt! in hicturt f . 4 -TiiiAi Jfclr ,.5.f r' Neil Hamilton , ' . - . yr . r College Executive Board to Supervise Sheet; Ads Pay for Venture. CALL FOR APPLICATIONS Announcement of plans for the publicrtion of the Bizad News, of ficial publication of the college of Business Administration, was made by Keith'Llghtner, president of the Bizad executive board yesterday. Applications to the pub lication ataff will be received thli week, he stated. The New3 will be published four times a year. The Bizad executive board supervises the publication and Prof. C. O. Swayzee is faculty advisor to the paper. A new idea will be carried out this year, Lightner stated, in that the paper will' b distributed free of charge ! to all students In the college of business admlnisratlon. The paper will be paid for by advertisements, he said. four sponsor rapsr. Sponsors of the Bizad News are the Commercial club, Delta Sigma PI and Alpha Kappa Psl, , professional commerce fraternities, and Chi Phi Theta, professional business administration sorority. ' Direct supervision will be handled I by the Bizad executive board. i The paper will contain all news ; of interest to students in the col- i lege, LiigiiLiier umieii. aii muse who wish to apply for editorial and business positions on the staff should hand in their applications I at the office of the dean of the col j lege, Mr. J. E. LeRossignol. ; Staff Positions Open. Staff positions are open to sophomores and above in the uni- ! versity. Freshmen who want staff positions later should work with ine siaii nuw, i,igiiLuvi sinu-u. jp ' plications for positions will be ac ! cepted until Thursday of this I week. j The publication of the Bizad , News was dropped a few years ago because of lack of student in terest in the paper, but now, with a demand ror tne paper, n win oranize a classics club. The club start publication again, according- . ,. , to Lightner. ' wiH serve to Pr0"1016 Sweater In- i "We are desirous of making the ' terest in the classics and to bring I Bizad News a paoer of Interest to ' together students, members say. ' all students," Dean LeRossignol Miss Margaret Deming presided ! stated, "and we want to make it at the first meeting. It was de ! as representative of the college as j cided to hold" meetings the first I it can be. All students who wish to I Friday of every month. The first i work on the paper are invited to I part of the meeting is to be de i hand in applications this week." voted to a social ' gathering, and i the last part of will be given over ! University Y. W. C. A. Group .Plans Ceremony for i" Tuesday Meeting. The annual Recognition Service , for members of the University Y. I I W. C. A. is to be held at 0:00 on ! Tuesday evening of this week in 'the Ellen Smith hall parlors. This 1 beautiful candle lighting service is one of the most impressive cere- I monies known to university women and has been practiced year after1 I year, dating back to the origin of ' the first University Y. w. c. a. j iony-seven years ago The purpose of the young women in their Christian association is: "To unite in the desire to realize a full and creative life through a growing knowledge of God, to de termine to have a part in making this life possible for people, and to seek to understand Jesus and fol low him. The candle lighting serv ice taking place this week is a ded ication as members of Y. W. C. A. to the ideals expressed in that pur pose. PLAYERS OFFER RATE UNKNOWN WARRIOR' Continued from Page 1.1 . . u ii,. , , h no conception of reality. Life in the absence of his son, with his mke his life a rleasant. dream- like existence, has become very precious to him. Without realizing it. he has already begun to antici- i pate his son's death for the glo- rious cause of the fatherland and! the subsequent life that he and his foster daughter will lead in the old chateau. The girl herself is morbidly PETE'S CONEY ISLAND LUNCH Curb Service Free- Delivery 1509 O St. B78S6 jra all i'Vfijinf Ur onlv liiln a icrH(n. C)ieii wlial ,v(ii jf ct. t a for Urinsc y o n r (fii-1. your buddit-M girl, or w li a t have you. TONIGHT! ami every Sa;..il:iy anl Sunday night ' in 1ii: week. nNCE pBee. ADM -- THE DAILY NF.BKASKAN Announces Kiigugmirnt I Ollt't i . i . nihimi. MISS HELEN MAJERS. whose informal engagement to ' Wayne Oldfather of Omaha is re-' vealed today. Mi.-s Mo jers Is a ' member of Zeta Tau Alpha and 1 Mr. Oldfather of Thl Delta Chi. J sensitive and introspective. She , clings desperately to her love, even as Bhe doubts its sincerity. . Three attitudes, the workings of j three minds almost distorted by i the gTeat war, are thrown into , conflict and Into bold relief in this ' play. It is a study of the war from I an lnieiteciuai, pKyuiluiugiual fjuiiii : . i .i.ni..tnni of view. "The Unknown Warrior" should be a new angle of the war and a welcome relief from the now trite comedy of the trenches, and the tragedies of No Mans Land. Joe Miller gets Tuesday s free lunch from House's. Adv IS . i j Faculty 3nd StllOeniS FOnil Society: Oldfather Gives Talk. Faculty and students of the Clas sics department met in Andrews 1 hall Friday afternoon to formally to lectures, translations, and to topics of interest to students of the classics. Prof. C. H. Oldfather, acting dean of the college of arts and sci ences, gave a short lecture on the I recent excavation of the agira at i Athens. He also read a portion of ; An Itinerary of Greece, by Pau.a nia:;. Election of officers for the club I was postponed indefinitely. Adele Tomhrink-i ftTid - Ailine.-. Johnson i were appointed to the refreshment 1 committee for the next meeting, Arlene Steeple and Eloise Real were selected to arrange for the next meeting place of the organi- zation. The next meeting is to be hald Friday. Dec4. vp . If-rT NihMJl XI WlLL Mttl ' 7."'" t TT Second Meeting of Honorary Science Group Set for Wednesday Night. 1 The University of Nebraska's chapter of Sigma Xi will hold its ' second meeting, November 9, 1931, at 7:30 p. m. in Morrill hall. Wil- ! liam Albert Willard, Ph. D.. Pro- j fessor of Anatomy, College of Medicine, will lecture on the sub- 1 ji'ct of "Nerve Muscles and Sense Oreans." 1 Dr. Willard will, in his discus ' sion, include questions of atrophy ithat have been encountered in the ! University hospital in the last I three or four years, together with I his own experimental work done in this iiuia. iniormauun wui uc Panted ''n myotony fake par alvses and other conditions or simile. r nature. The meeting 1 Pen to the PubIlc Vi iinAiFwoV DKAiN 1 JIlMll MJA WRITKS ARTICLE Vhiii nwnDIIV UTS I tllMJSUI III A j)hilosophical treatment of j i (i, The Mechanistic and V lianslic Concepts of Life," written by Dr. T. J. Thompson, appears in the November issue of the Open Court, a journal dealing with philosophic al and religious topics. Dr. Thomp son, who is dean of student affairs at the University of Nebraska, discusses the subject from tne chemist's point of view. : (iuext Speaks Befmv Girls Group on Eggs j Mrs. Clara Snyder of the Insti ! tute of American Poultry Indus ' tries was a guest at the home eco nomics department at tin college of agriculture last week. She ad dressed the class in food economics on "Consumer Problems in Kgg and Poultry "Buying.", ST x 1 . i V . f ! ' i i AND DANCING Starting At Eight TO DAN HARPER AND HIS MUSIC "A Swwt Little Kaii'1 You II Likf." Pl.-iym-s v-rj' Kutidny niclit to titrer rruwrtH. on f!oir thai a smooth uh k'"-'- Star-Lit-Arcade ON A TURN SOUTH OF LINCOLN OPEN TICKET SALES for mm BALL Pasteboards to Be Offered At $2.50 Beginning Tomorrow. Sale of tickets for the Military ball, opening event of the Ne braska formal season Dec. 4, be gins tomorrow, Capt. G. W. Spoer ry announced Saturday. A special price of two dollars for basic drill students In uniform was quoted. Tickets for others will be $2.50. Ticket sale will be In charge of Scabbard and Blade, advanced military science honorary. The en tire city of Lincoln has been divid ed into blocks with a squad of ticket salesmen In charge of a cadet officer for each. A "campus day" to help ticket salivo hna horn scheduled for Fri day this week. All drill students will report In uniform to stimulate interest in the campaign. Saturday, following "campus day" on Frtda. drill students will b?gin their canvass of the city. All R. O. T. C. companies, the band, Pershing Rifles and Headquarters company will take part in the ririvo rSriii students will canvass the city during their regular drill periods, according to the plan out lined by Captain Spoerry. CONSTRUCTION OF NF.W DORMITORY WILL BEGIN SOON j (Continued from Page 1.) purchased a short time before In the extension of the city campus and were not designed for dormi tory use. Three of these cottages are still used as dormitories. On Nov. 30, 1923, a dormitory committee of the alumni of the university was named to investi gate the possibility cf building nriiniic. This committee was composed of Charles W. Roberts, chairman, the late W. O. Jones, Mrs. W. E. Hardy, Mrs. L. W. Korsnieyer, and Miss Amanda Heppner, dean of women. This committee made studies of dormi tory organizations and made a proposal that the alumni of the university be interested in a plan of financing whereby they would buy dormitory bonds. They con ferred with architects and had the first set of plans drawn up. This idea was dropped at a time when university authorities were stress ing the need for additional class room buildings and for more ade quate salaries for the faculty. Women Aid Cauee. The Lincoln branch of the Amer ican Association of University Women has had a standing com mittee on dormitories lor several years. This committee, with a changing personnel, has studied the local problem and advised such a building. The women of the Faculty club, an organization of higher ranking women teachers in the university, has also had a com mittee studying this matter. This committee, composed of M 1 s Mabel Lee, professor of physical education, president of the club; Miss Laura Pfeifer, associate professor of European history, secretary; Miss Margaret Fedde, professor of home economics; Mrs. Hattie Plum Williams, processor of sociology; and Dean Heppner as chairman, studied the problem for some time and reported in favor of women's dormitories. "We believe that the dormitory system with its opportunities for finer living and nobler thinking will plan an integrel part in pro ducing a superior type of citizen who will reflect credit upon the university and make a worthwhile contribution to the community and society at large," read a portion of ' their report. Dean Heppner Active. Dean Heppner, an active worker for the dormitories, has visited many of the modern dormitory plants In other universities, in cluding Michigan, Cornell, Iowa State, University of Iowa. North western, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Columbia, Kansas and Grinnell. From these Inspections she has been able to critically study pro posed plans for Nebraska dormi Sweaters Leather Coats Overcoats Have Them Cleaned Now Prompt and Dependable Service Always at the Modern Cleaners Soukup & Webtover Call F2377 for Service r-v JZ DECORATIONS FAVORS AND INVITATION'S for your Formal or Houae Party iA very low price. WE'LL HELP Plan Your Party Decorations Suggest Ideai". lay out the design on paper or they will appear In your home and manne the actual decoration. tories and make many suggestions of great value. Other administrative officers of the University with the architects have made several inspection trips to other universities to study types of construction, methods of administration, operation, and fi nance, incorporating their find ings In the Nebraska arrange ment. "We are not trying to build palaces for the girls, but provide them comfortable living quarters in good taste. Many of our girls will marry and live In modest homes In the state. We should not give them cause to be dissatis fied with their future home life because of extravagant dormi-1 tories," recently commented Dean I Heppner. Combine Best Features. Among the best features found by Dean Heppner in other schools and that have been incorporated In tne Nebraska dormitory plans are the lavatory in each room, single beds, the requisite number of showers, closet arrangements, room size, and number of resi dents in the building. Dean Hepp ner has also secured many pointers at the annual meetings of the Na tional Association of Deans of Women. At these annual meet ings papers are presented dealing with the dormitory situation, . dor mitory needs, dormitory standards, etc. Architects for the Nebraska dormitory have followed as far as possible these standards as deter mined by actual experience. Women have also played a con siderable part in planning other features of the Nebraska dormi tory system. Study halls, recrea tions rooms, party rooms, check rooms all have come in for their attention at the hands of the in terested women. The facilities and equipment for indoor athletics have been planned by the women's physical education department of the University. Miss Fedde Helps. The diuiner nuarters have also i been given long and serious con sideration by women. Miss Fedde, chairman of the department of home economics, assisted first by Miss Bemice Elwell and later by Miss aMrtha A. Park of the same department, has taken over the responsibility for the dining room equipment. They feel that a su perior arrangement has been ef fected by having the kitchens and dining room on the first floor in stead of in tae basement as is the case in many dormitories. Initial Cost Higher. University authorities explained today that the initial cost of the first dormitory unit is somewhat higher than will be the additional units because this central unit will provide administrative quarters, kitchens, dining rooms, and recre ation rooms for the mtire dormi tory system. The additional units or wings will be devoted almost entirely to student rooms. With the new dormitories ready Protect Your License We have public liability and property damage Insurance on our RENT-A-CARS Ask Us MOTOR OUT COMPANY 1120 P St. Hotel D'Hamburger Shotgun Service 1141 Q St. 1718 o St. QidgetxGvenzel Co Advice to the FOOT WEARY from 29 doctors What make of shoe really gives you most comfort? Recently 45 foot specialists met to decide this point. They examined 12 different trade-marked shoes, each of vhich had been advertised to give special comfort in walking. Brand names were concealed. Each doctor's vote was bated on appearance, con struction and efficiency. Results: Walk-Over Main Spring Arch Shoe 29 votes Shoe Brsnd "B--7 vote. Shoe Brand "E--2 votei Shoe Brand "C"-4 votea Sboe Brand "F"-l ote Shoe Brand "D" 3 votet Brapda "C, II. I. ..... u a t ere. J, K nd L"-0 ole. DAVIX TIE Chocolate kid. Brazil lizard trim. Main Spring Arch. $10 THREE for use by the fall of 1932, Uni versity authorities feel that for the first time all university woniea will be ablo to enjoy happy and congenial surroundings that are reasonably priced, attractively furnished, adequately equipped, and well governed, a combination desired by all parents. VISITS ENGINEER S. Donald M. Campbell, '28, sales assistant for the Westinghous Klectnc and Manufacturing com pany in Chicago, visited the of. lices of the college of engineering last week. LEARN to DANCE Will guarantee to teach you In 0 private lettona. Alto three lenon courte. Lettona by Appointment Three Succettful Yeart LEE A. THORNBERRY B3635 Private Studio 2300 Y St. 131 AVIOKL BROTHERS 1131 O St. Another Shipment of those Smart Mesh H osiery arrive for AAonday Selling at an extraordinary price of 35 air Perfectly Fashioned. Shereblak and Taniti (Brown) DIAAOND BROTHERS I. V. Floor Two. GEORGE BROS. 1218 N WA M V IS IS aj a m..i (hv ". t MILES WMT ON "O" STREET