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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 1, 1932)
The Daily Nebraskan Station A. Lincoln. Nabraaka OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA 'Entered .. .econd-cla.. matter hKh IBTt! Lincoln, Nebraska under act of congrm. March J. 187 and at apecial rate o PosM3etProw?e7.,,,rtf 20 1922 1103. act of October 3. 1917. authored January ro. isfii. tuirtv.SECOND YEAR pUbli.hed Tuesday. Wednesday. Thursday. FrWay and Sunday morning during the academic jr SUBSCRIPTION RATE ,2 a yer Sing.. Copy 6 cent. VenfeatemaH." " Unrdon ot ,h. Student Pub..cat,.n Board. Editorial Office University Hall ?,T.pnhTneDT:UB:fi 'N..1! B-3333 (Journal, Ask for Nebraakan editor. EDITORIAL STAFF .. Editor-In-chlet Howard G. Allaway Aasociate Editor Jack Erickaon Managing Editori .,, Hall Nfws Editora tlcally every profession and trade in the United States. Some Items: Medicine $5,250 Law 5.250 Engineering; 5,000 Architecture . 5,000 Dontistry 4,725 THE DAILY NEKRASKAN TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 1, 1932. Phillip Brownell Richard Moran Irma Randall Lynn Leonard Women' Editor . Sports Editor . Society Editor Kathertna Howard Joe Miller vtiit Cro&a BUSINESS STAFF . Business Manager H. Norman Gallaher Assistant Business Manager . ,,. Frank Musgrave Bernard Jennings George Hoi yoke Student Workers Exploited. ONE of the most noticeable effects ot the de pression in collegiate circles is that a much larger portion of the student body than formerly is helping foot its own education bill by part-time work. "Hashing" for their meals remains one of thfl most common ways in which students help finance their schooling. Men who formerly considered them selves "above" work are this year taking their daily shift in return for three squares. Standard remuneration for this sort of work haa long been three hours work for three meals. This year, however, that old and respected oc :.-mic law of supply and demand, operating in conj : - ;u-i with the restaurateurs" knowledge that student ulso lutely must work in order to stay in school, u '('.: ing "out to the disadvantage of students in this matter, College teaching 3,230 Social work 2,517 Library work 2,250 Journalism 2,250 Skilled trades 1,700 Nursing 1.570 This list muzt bo qualified with the note that it represents those who entered their profession, suc ceeded and stayed there in other words "the cream of the crop." Those who failed and drifted into an other line are, of course, not included in the com pilation. To the student of medicine, law, engineering or even Journalism, however, struggling to secure aa education at great inconvenience and sacrifice on his or his parents' part, this list looks like the pot of gold at the end of the tommencement day parade. Balancing the rosy Columbia report against the gray fact that five to six out of ten 1032 graduates from Nebraska are today marching with the un employed, the student who is faced with the task oC job hunting next summer, gets an estimate of his problem. That only four in ten of the graduates from this school last year have jobs as yet, is not grounds for very optimistic hopes on the part of those now in school. Nevertheless it must be considered that none of the 1.233 had jobs last May; that 462 of these have found a place for themselves in the world since last June. This view of the matter, compared with a guess at the proportion of the same number of ordinary laborers who could have done the tame thing, demonstrates that common though it has become a college degree still has its points. Contemporary Comment In Re Requirements. IT IS doubtful if the student can be found who tne state of Indiana can have no Common Sense. If ever a student body was faced with the responsibility of sacri ficing unstintedly in its pleasures and in its luxuries, of fighting for its university to the last ditch, the student body of Purdue faces that sacred responsibility today. And if any student body of any univer sity ever encountered that duty with a more common-sense man ner, or with a more unflinching determination to succeed than did the body of student leaders which met yesterday in Fowler hall, we have "neither record nor memory of tha case. For the first time since the be erinninsr of the school year Presl dent Elliott laid his case squarely in front of the representatives of the students. It is essential that Purdue today is in the midst of a crisis such as she has never before known as an educational instiUv tion; that for the first time in his tory she is on the defensive against the action of legislative forces, against the more financially fortu nate engineering institutions which eye many of our faculty body with envy; that the faculty, the admin istration and the students are this winter in a glass house, and that every rock, every pebble, that we throw will be breaking a window for criticism that might bring disaster to the university when she again goes on the defensive next year. What then is our duty as stu dents of Purdue if she is to prove herself invulnerable against, criti cism in 1933? It is as clear as the handwriting on the wall. We must so economize, we must so re 1 trench in our social life, we must so abide by the dictates of com i men sense and the standards of the outside world that the people of 1 doesn't find certain "required" courses distaste- doubt that they are witnessing a ful. A great deal of this grumbling can probably be i Jma of campus life in which the u. . Si7,. ucoi i. .ta 6 6 f j 'characters are economical, calcu- attributed to the undergraduate s universal tendency ; latian. conservative, hard driving The necessity of eating remaining constant, the ' to belabor everything that smacks of administra- j students who appreciate the privi- demand for jobs has gone up and their supply. through reduction in operating personnel, down. The result is that students this year are forced to work four and five hours for their three meals. The argument of the inn keepers is. of course, apparent Reduced volume and a narrow margin ot profit, they maintain, necessitates reduction in all branches of overhead, including wages. They point out that wages in every line have been cut and that they, too, must follow. That the cost of food consequently the cost of the meals given in payment for work has also gone down, they seem to disregard. What appears to be the case is simply this: the cafe and restaurant operators, knowing that the student must have jobs, have taken advantage of that necessity to exploit the student workers by lowering wages to v.tat amounts to atout fifteen cent3 an hour. tive control, and as such it is hardly worthy of rec ognition. But some of it arises from an honest ques tioning of the wisdom of requiring certain courses in the curriculum. Expressions of opinion from both types of students find their way to the office of the Daily Nebraskan, and it is to answer them that this is written. To the first class of students who oppose "require ments", to the ones who "gripe" solely for the sake of "griping", there is no answer. They can only be told to return when they grow up. But to the second type those who earnestly seek to satisfy their intellectual curiosity, there are some comments to be made. In many cases these thought ful students have tried vainly to find an explana tion for the wrongs with which they believe them lege of receiving a college educa tion. We have so far spoken in terms of vague generalities. Let us now be specific. As we look around us, faced with such a crucial situation as we are faced with today, we can see innumerable in-economies, and financial inconsistencies that are in existence on the campus. We pledge ourselves to bend every effort toward their elimination or their correction. Our economic campaign, spe cifically, will be concentrated on these points: 1. Drastic reductions in the ticket prices of all organization selves to be inflicted. They cannot see why the ac quisition of a degree should be made so painful and j dull by courses which seem to them exceedingly j j popularity and traditional value, remain on the campus. For the students seeking jobs to protest is, of i stupid course, futile. If they don't like it, someone else is j willing to take their job. Should the university, however, come to some agreement with the restau rant owners as a group, it might be possible not only to secure an equitable pay rate for part-time student workers, but also to provide jobs for more students by shortening the hours and spreading the available work. Employment Among the A. BJ's. A SURVEY" just completed through question naires returned by 1.233 of the University's 1.310 1932 graduates provides a detailed picture of ! the way the world treats the finished product of j modern education in this day when jots are scarce and people still get hungry three time a day. j Of 765 men and 467 women replying to the ques tionnaire, 37 percent have jobs. By itself this figure is not very impressive. But when it is considered that some 116 now taking graduate work here or elsewhere and the women who make no attempt at a "career" arc counted among the unemployed, it is apparent that Nebraska '32 has fared reasonably well for these times. Other interesting facts brought out in the returns are these: Of those who have jobs. 31 percent were mem bers of a fraternity or sorority while in schooL Of the total graduating class, however, only 21 percent were Greeks. The Greeks it seems had the best luck Job hunting. The Phi Beta Kappa employment figure was 38 j percent only 1 percent greater than the average for all those replying. Of those graduates now married, 41 percent have Jobs. A wife, it would seem, is a greater asset lo job bunting than a P. E. K. key. Men had 8.5 percent better success than women in getting work. Finally: Graduates prepared for one of the pro fessions found jobs more plentiful than did those educated in the "general cultural" curriculum. For most of those students who really think, the i average required course probably is stupid, and it may be assumed from the start that they undoubt edly have some grounds for complaint. No humanly devised thing, including curricula, has yet been found perfect. Neither are there indications that such a discovery is at all likely. Improvement, how- ever, is still held to be possible, except by those who j are decrepit or cynical, so let us examine the case i further. j It might be possible, of course, to revise the cur- j ricula to allow greater freedom in the choice of electives, as the complainants feelingly recommend. They point to the educational prestige of eastern schools and declare that no great educational insti tution can be developed unless the students therein r-o aiiru-t tn rheum comDletcIv the courses o: study which their abilities dictate The Student Pulse flrirf, ecnrte rontrihntlon pertl a.nl l., auttrrn mt ladnt life and the anivrrily are wrlcooira by (hi ariiartiTMrnf. undrf the auat rt-mrtr lion ( Hjnd arwftparM-r pntrttaF. hira esrludr all hbrlom mall and M-n,fwl altark. Iltm mol l iK.M-d. hut ftantra will b wiln kHl I rem pnbliratioa if ae arirra. 2. The abolition of all such or ganization dances as are consid ered minor, inconsequential or fi- no1al Failures. 3. Temporary discontinuance of all fraternity ana sororuy Home coming decorations 4. Unprecedented reduction in honorary fees. 5. Radical alterations and reduc tions in clnss dues. 6. Reduction in the number of cadet officers' luncheons. Students as Citizens. A hopeful sign in higher educa tion today is the great increase of interest in national and interna tional problems on the part of stu dents in the United States, al though students in other lands are reported to be better informed, as a rule, on public questions and to take more seriously their responsi bilities as citizens. There seems to be quite a clear cut tendency for at least a por tion of the students to stop to con sider that they are on the campus not only for book study and class room recitations but at the same time they are obtaining or should obtain a knowledge of current events and by reading done outside the regular course of study should keep in close contact with prob lems of the day. With the world in the situation ii.i if la Ihorp la an ODtimistlC tone in the fact that from the col lege men and women, with tne Uoi. fnr nrpnnization and unified uaoto ' - fi action which exists in their com mon experience, may come the necessary leadership for a way out of the present crisis. This idea expresses itself in an intercollegiate manner through various types of conferences of .niiocro crrniins for the purpose of considering international prob lems, questions or importance m the economic world, political no tions, educational considerations. an rpiifrinna ouestions. Such or ganizations as the National Stu Hont K7,iprtion of America and the Student Christian associations hnv rlnne a exeat deal to Dnng about this intercollegiate sharing! of experiences. College students must rememuri that they are not apart trom me a-nrlrl nnietlv resting- on a cloud somewhere in space; they are liv ing beings on a world that at pres ent is very confused. Every day of the year they must work in classes, in cultural, literary and dramatic groups, in economic and nnlitirfl! organizations as citi zens of a commonwealth that needs ; their help. In the words of former Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, "The man of action has the present: to the l thinker belongs the future." I Oregon tmeraio. And thy usually do and we lean back and pnn But We Don't Bile The Hand That 1 Feed ing fa LINN. Xebraska on The Makeshift. Benedict Arnold's recent article ; in Vanity Tair reminds U3 c.f a j crack which the eastern sports writing brotherhood once made about us. The legend ran to the ef- j feet that Quarterback Fleischrr.ar.n of one of the larger eastern schools : uL-r.ulrl nrll thp u-nnl pasilv r,vf-r the . eyes ol the big dumb Cornhu.-kers. ! They w:-re wrong, as Heaven And even the investigator is forced to admit that knows and Chick Meehan will Us- ; these words of the complainants have the ring ot iify. We do give them credit, r.o.v truth. The words have truth, yes, but they fail to ever, for being able to tell football j . , . .. T. . from backgammon, and for being ; state the case properly. For a school like the Lnl- j aWe to fm a buffer for versity of Nebraska, with its heterogeneous student j s.ate an, lneir coiiege. For the , body cannot be classified with some of the institu-; sake of fairness, tho. let's asx-im i lions' which the questioners name. J for a moment, that they were j The student body here is primarily made up ol j on , undergraduates, for most of whom complete free- and ue trathing Btaff is l kir.g dom in the choice of subjects would be distinctly OVer tt list of candidates, f n':y harmful. It may be that some few thinking students j big dumb men are eligible. Su.i would profit' by such an arrangement. It is certain, j gnly they gltoM . in fact, that some students would profit. Some He js a natural H isn't especially students would, but a way to discover them would r rjt he baa enough of :i.Ht TEACHEP.S COLLEGE of Columbia university bM recently compiled what it chcxes to call lib! of the average annual earnings through prao first have to be invented, and psychology is still an infant science. Perhaps at some distant time in the future a method of classifying stuienU according to their intellect will be found. It is entirely posKible in the otner cr.araciensuc anu prtrtq ..- t ite to more than make up i r it. j An i he's a quarterback. Tre 1' k-fii-M coach says to the er,ii covh: "What is this, a L5uriir.fc-ar.v--'.' An ! since all good things coa.e to light of modern scientific achievement. Until then, j sn end. be comes back wim , hLever. the grumblers against "r,qui,ements" will ; 'V oT on" tbem of till be with us. j the goldenrod, for the tv.cLt.ethi ' And there is little advice to give them. For pbil- cnturv, I think, is for someone j osopby. alas, is learned not from textbooks, lectures i who thinks you have to h i.;.',r editorials, but from experience alone And ex- ?y & perience cannot be given, it noun be had. So, lo p?r)e on tne cr0ss of notoriety, those who still must wall at being forced to take u,. y the school sy.-t- m isn't ( reouirement ". a word of cheer, and tne nope inai ajquai ucic u.v..B w.e- u i n, . j thn u-ritea .chraa ,n ir- 1 I mey nm r: . v. 7 , . . SJaKe. as rjiniuu a. ji v.-a irj. only point be proved dur.ng th; en- j Even Hobos Crab About Depression Increasing Number of Unemployed Who would have gused it? 1 the major topic of auscuneion i at Even the hobo are crabbing about the quarter cenunniai uravtuuuu the depression! It isn't the 'act i of the order to oe new ov. ,, , t.irint far-uitv n.i ih! tvi it,iatlon o dampened the alumni of the college of holism ' spirits of the members of the order are worried about their own em-' that the usual faiety of the class ployment. for boboism is founded j mates in their autumnal reunion oft that wonderful science of living was lacking. A the customary sub without a routine job. But. accord- jects were discussed- The "depres- l tn lirV MrR.th P. Ph . oro-I mirm mtifff have become almost SS lessor of panhandhng. ) who is the j serious a problem as that of wal king of the booo" and dean of the ; rimony, which yearly menaces tbe college, the trouble s cause? try the numberless unemployed wbo are thrown out cm the road. They don't understand tbe eth ics of our profession, which inci dectly requne syou to have no profeoslon. They re getting ta the way. They're destroying the reputation,-of boboism. W'by tbey don't e-vtfl understand the A B Cs of "our order," MacBeth lamented. A B C's ef Order. soon they will see tbe light or that iney method of determining wbo is capable of selecting bis own course of study. . m ..a i . If. Hilatf niuKI Iing oi tne accioeui Frank is a sophomore in the ccl- James and William are freshmen in the iaw coiiege. All three have participated in campus activities. Eugene Eustice, Omaha, also a member of Alpha Tbeta Chi, died two weeks ago from pneumonia. order by thinning the hobo ranks MR. CRiBiilJCiilED MONDAY Father Nebraska Stadents Meetf Accidental Death At Bed Cloud. Ansil B- CrabClL R1 Cloud, was accidentally killed 1 Monday , The A B Cs of the order ac-1 afternoon. The detail of the ac cording to to Macð arc: Civea a pan of water, a bar of soap and a little courtesy a bo rill get far to life, geographically and la worldly esteem. Tbe situation caused by the "de pression stiffs" (unemployed) is so Iiririlnf to boboism that it wiil be cident were uljumjh iionoay Crabifl was the father ol James. William and Frsxk Crabill. students at tha Utdverslty of Ne braska, and mem be -i of Alpha Tbeta Chi fraternity. His sons left for bom immediately after hear- PARTY FOUNDER TO SPEAK Bainbridge Colbj Appears in Behalf of Roosevelt at Auditorium. Eainbridge Colby, secretary of state under President Wilson and one of tbe founders of the pro greesive republican part, will spoak at the city auditorium Tues day evening in behalf of Governor fic-osevtlt. He is a lawyer by pro fession and has held various fed eral offices during his carf r, tbe moit important being on tbe United States shipping board and tbe inter-alijed conlerence at Paris. Professor TalLg On KeviMon of Treaty In. W. H. Pfeiler of the German department spoke in Omaha Fri day Oct. 2. at a joint meeting of history, geography and elementary teachers. His subject was "Bevi ( th v-.ai!l treaty from the German Viewpoint," tire epic He redicules the most bt-autiful building in the world, bjt if he were as well read as he pretends, be must have run acro.i-! that l;r; about "Justice" which is c arv-i out j of solid stone mere hoove the threshold. We have waited long to see h-,m-public condemnation in print but have been waiting for t., that never came in. If Nebraska ha :o little to offer for so much, why then, should a genius like this linger around and wate his fragrance on the dert air. Finally our football tam in swell. And its on the up and up and the material comes from the region between the Eig Muddy and he Eadlands. Y.r.i th 4jr a.:t aobo curse In Ita d m i.iM yrari. V. tj tin f.'irt cm t.k in Ux m.ii Hftl t vjrry l.c drcrr that keifs 6rp IE Of a c-lrJl .' in 'M oo4rtul H nuw lajrfcf lik cynic St sheared f irk 33 ht r.'jw ihtt la lb (jtur lh acarict and fr h .r.rf arM I a MT-'n rrtw if txt ail o.s'-.'fui hr a'n't h' K"T V,t ma tv..r ai.1 yU t.J our liu a vm Tot Uj tr"M ar.d Craais tp tm tara ita a tart Shall ITe Co to College? Professors love to make the re mark, especially in freshmen classes, that approximately one half of the students in the uni versity should not be here. Tbey seldom hesitate long enough to explain their statements, and the inexperienced freshman is apt to believe that he is not the excep tion. It is true perhaps, that their estimation is a little too casual to be accurate. They are. neverthe less, right in their belief that not all of the students who enter the university are physically and men tally suited for college training. Americans are gradually coming to the belief that higher education is necessary to a well-balanced and happy life. Parents raise their children with the belief that they shall go to college. They puint out their sacrifices and dreams until their children feel compelled to accede to their desires. All Ameri cans have come to over-emphasize the necessity of college education until the phrase has become syn onymous with success. Its values have been so stressed that a young man is willing to sacrifice almost anything to get enough education to be able to compete with others. We should not be so slavish in our regard for a higher education. It is not the keynote for success in itself. It is but a means to an er.d and some men without an education are more fitted for a po.-ition than those who have been trained. An education t-tould not mean so much to the student that be would be willing to go deeply in debt for it. Alter he is out of school be would be depressed at the thought of a large debt, a kind ol morteate on his life. A worse sacrifice is that of i health. This is the risk run by a student taking too many hours or trying to work his way thru school. This tryir-g to "burn the candle at both ends" has been tried before and found to be wanting. Health should be a mans first coniiid'-ration, for without it he can enjoy nothing. fcome students have to go to col lege because of the precedent set bv their parent. This doinlnente oi another life is very unfair. A father nd not judge that bis son's lite should be patterned upon his. TLat son may prefer to develop more initiative in hi learning than college training would develop. ;r-at executives cannot be de- J vt-lojx-d in college for students come to depend too much upon an- other's commands. The ones who are most unsuited to higher training are those who let it give them a superior feeling. It makes them dissatisfied for it narrows down their outlook on life. Many students are not equal to a college ecLcation so it makes them become cynical and blase with knowledge. Since everyone is not suiiea ior higher education, Americans cer tainly should not emphasize Its Importance as much as tbey do. Even now the situation is becom ing threatening, for the universit ies are crowded with ones who are in the process of becoming "edu cated fools." Abyssmal Ignorance is no worse than unnecessary wis dom. ' ENGINEERS FROM FOUR STATES HOLD MEETINGS (Continued From Page 1.1 were entertained at the home of Mrs. C. E. Mickey. Departmental meetings and the business meeting were held Satur dcy morning. R. G. Klocffler of Manhattan, Kas., was elected as chairman and F. W. Norris of Lin coln as secretary. Dean R. A. Seaton, national president of the S. P. E. E., gave a brief talk at the luncheon at the chamber of commerce. The society meets once a year. The next meeting will be held at Manhattan. KLUB ANNOUNCES COMMITTEES FOR FALL PRODUCTION (Continued from Page 1.) Lynn Leonard, and George Mur phy. Contacts for the production will be in charge of a group con sisting of Byron Goulding. chair man; Lee Young, Charles Stead man, and Owen Johnson. Th rnmmittffn nr to 8tart work immediately, Thompson de clared, uerinue assignments oi work will be made to the groups by the various committee chair men. STUDENTS FAVOR HOOVER IN VOTE AT UNIVERSITIES (Continued from Page 1). Cynic, Washington Daily, and Wis consin pally cardinal. Roosevelt Schools. Rnnsevelt received the EXeatest number of preferences in the vote taken by Arkansas. Florida Flam beau, Kentucky Kernel, Tulane Hullabaloo, North Carolina Daily Tar Heel, Oklahoma Dally, South Caroline Gamecock, Tennessee Orange and White, Vanderbilt Hustler, Tezan. and Virginia Mili tary Institute Cadet. The four polls carried by Nor man Thomas were of the Colorado Silver and Gold, St. Louis Univer sity News, New York University Daily, and Columbia Spectator. The south, in conformity with tradition Is the stronghold of Roosevelt according to the Prince tonian poll as Hoover swept all the other parts of the country. How ever, the results are misleading in that the repuDlican carried a large part of the polls by a narrow mar gin, piling up his margin of ap proximately 11,000 votes in only a few schools. From the three schools in California, he picked up 1.000 votes of his final margin over the other candidates. Conflict With Digest. These results conflict with the Literary Digest poll which, ac cording to the semifinal compila tion of results, gives Roosevelt a little less than a clean sweep of the entire electorial college vote. The fact that the Prlncetonian poll inrinrtea votes cast bv any student in the universities, some of whom mav not be of voting age, may dis qualify it as a criterion of the No vember election results. A complete tabulation of the re sults appears in this issue of the Nebraskan. FIRST DAY SALES OF ANNUAL GOOD, MANAGER STATES Continued From Page 1.) tained in Social Sciences hall and I Andrews hall during the v?ek. One of the business staff merr.bers will be in charge of the boo h in Social Sciences every day from 8 in the morning until 2 in the aft ernoon. In addition orders will be taken on the corner of University hall at all hours of the day. There will be someone in the Cornhusker office every day from eight in the morning until four in the after noon taking order?. With an organized sales force such as this, the business manager believes that no student will have been missed when tbe campaign comes to and end. To Award Prize. The prize of twenty-five dollars worth of clothing at Magee'a to be awarded to the member of ;he sales staff making the largest number of sales bas started a con test among the salesmen and tbe saleswomen in charge of the drive. The business manager declared that tbe profit sharing plan is an important feature in the campaign. With tbe co-operation of the stu dent body, it will prove to be of a great monetary value to each indi vidual if orders are placed now. Coed Idea Popular. A for tbe institution of the Cornhusker Co-ed idea, much fav orable comment has been beard about it since it was made known. It is a general belief that the Cornhusker bas never puolished enough pictures of Nebraska's Co eds in former years, but when the book is published this year the fea ture section will carry tbe pictures of five girls dt gnated as the Cornhusker Co-- Is. They are to be chosen by those wbo purchase books. Every aub cription blank has a ballot at tached with spare for three names to be ruled out by tbe purenwr. Tbe names of any three girls may be placed there and the ballot turned over to tbe Cornhusker of ficial. When tbe campaign is closed the votes will be counted by staff members and a faculty com. iiiitteft and the fivo iccclvii. tha most votc3 determined. WE CLEAN HATS Men's Fe!t . . 75c Ladies9 Felt 50c Caps 25c Modern Cleaners Soukup & Westovcr Call F2377 for Service HEY GrEQRGE, you 3o r: r FAT WORK THAT ! ME? I PAT WIEATl BIG game hunters fuel them selves up regularly with that famous energy-and-courage food. Shredded Wheat. No namby pamby foods for them! So start jour aay with Shredded Wheat, and see what the evening brings! It's 100 whole wheat, you know : t i and that's Nature's own energy food! Nothing lost, and nothing added. Shredded Wheat is energy food, but it knows how to taste good, too; Slide yourself up to your favor ite eating place. Ask Joe for a brace of those hearty biscuits. Float them in a bow l of cream or milk. Keep up the good work for a week, and then tell tbe campus to watch out! Wba r" Niifara Ftll o the pack-. oa KNOW -00 hmrt Shredded Wheat NEW V-8 FORD Now vllbi for rant. All our car arc equipped with htra. Don foroct cur specials and tha rew oa prcaaion rt MOTOR OUT CO. 1120 P St. Always Cpan 811 NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY "Unocda Bakers" aaaaaai MEMBERS TO GIVE MUSICAL PROGRAM AT CLUB MEETING The French club, sponsored by Mr. E. V. Telle, Instructor In Ro mance Unruaj-ea, will bold a meeting Friday evenloT E2ea Smith Hall at 7:80. There will be an address by Mr. Telle and some musical number presented by members of tbe club. EX-COVKRXOR John H. Morehead Congressional Candidate for Re-election. GOVERNMENT A NON-POLITICAL SPEECH TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1 AT 4 O'CLOCK SKARP Social Science Auditorium PONOREO BY YOUNG PEOPLE'S DEMOCRATIC CLUB