r0!Y. OCTOBER h 1933. VARSITY MIETS B TEAM WEDNESDAY INFINALWORKQUT I Nubbins Will Use Iowa State N Plays During Intensive Scrimmage Today. NEEDS WORK OFFENSE Reserve Players See Action X Penny and Debus Slightly Injured. Vj,h three regulars out of eup thc lll,Kk0P Sfl" take its last intensive w before im'etiiiR the jSS SatUy. Oct. 14 nt V this afternoon at 4:.W A 1 : a ,orial Htndinm ;;Sa"B-s(uad versed in ,oa22e-S"ud to see action tht, afternoon's scrimmage are l" P,nnev end; Warren DeBus. f- an I 'Waited Pflum, tackle. fTthe workout, which is open to In much Bible plans to '"C varsRv against the Nub Wnd an e tort to correct the binS, ff,n"e which was found rUr acktTi--a. instances J the Ames plays as dictated by o8 nh Rrnwnc who scouted them wee'K. the Ciblemen ::rexpe teed t.a)s, spend some r-e-ve backfie.d on fast vear is expe. ted to alter Mack Mine, in the first trong bacKfield lineup. Parsons has been showing up tavorably of , nd it is expected that he and pi .tend, with Bruce Kllbourne at the other wmg position. Gail O'Brien has one tackle position ffiS with Cpple. Thompson and Pflum lighting tor the other With DeBus out ot the lineup tem porarily the guard spaces are taken by Clair Bishop and Glenn justice. Franklin Meier is center with the backiield of Sauer. Bos well and Mas'cnon intact. . Elmer HuHta. bcin.", groomed tor the center position, has as sumed that role on the second string with Neal Mehrin? and Jim Heldt performing on each side of him at guard posts. Ed Uptegrove and Carroll Reese are at tackle with the win" fceing p'ayed by Bernard S.herer, Virgil Yelkin andk Wilson. A proving back field is made up of Johnny Wil liams, Jerry INoue, Glenn Skewes and Boh Benson. IT SEEMS TO by I ruin liyau ME Although Amos Is somewhat dis turbed about the reports of the Ne braskan victory over the Texas Longhorns Saturday they are nev ertheless of the opinion that the Huskers can be beaten and are confident of their ability to per form such an upset. Ames and Iowa have been somewhat under estimated in the past and these teams are detei mined that they ill have to be reckoned with from now on. This Wednesday the Veenker squad will scrimmage their fresh man team which has been spend ing the first few days of the week in learning the plays which were executed by the scarlet and cream Saturday against the Steers. Dur ing the time when the Huskers and Longhorns were having their battle for supremacy the Cyclones trimmed their yearlings squad to YVVTVYVVV RAY RAMSAY Your old favorite catties a part in "The Late Christopher Bean'' you'll love. A clever Play, produced only a few weeks ago on Broadway. And good tickets are still available. See it tonight! University Players Tickets in Temple Lobby UAAAAAAAAAA SMARTEST COLLEGE SMOES IN TOWN IPRGCE&D FOR LEAN IPL1IRSES IV116 (aSual Purchaser most shoes look smart, but in the -JV0ld here mart ivss goes below the surface. The - v" 'c uuni, io siaj . Hotiery Specially Priced 17c and 25c NEWARK 1140 the tune of 33 to n Th .i. u I fore the Cyclones defeated the Unl- veinuy oi uenver 20 to 13, their play being unmnrred by a single fumble, while their fnrw.rH cut through to nab every fumble maul- vy jjunver. The Husker squad Is leaving for their battle with the Ames outfit this Friday, October 13. Not being naturally of a superstitious nature I would nevertheless hate to have such a date as mentioned above turn out with a decidedly bitter re sult. No game is won until after it has been played and there can still be upsets unless the Ames battle is taken seriously. A Pullman and diner will be pro vided for the team, which will leave at 7 o'clock from the Bur lington station. The Pullman will be set apart from the rest of the train upon its arrival ft Ames and the squad will stay in the car un til time for a warmup and a look at the Cyclone field. About thirty men will make the trip and after the game they will leave immedi ately for home. DeBus and Hubka Will Head Squad in Saturday's Conflict. Warren DeBus of Belleville, Kas., and Elmer Hubka of Vir ginia, Neb, have been appointed co-captains of the Husker football team for their coming conflict with Iowa State this Saturday. Oct. 14. The game will be played at Ames. This is War ren D e B 'J a' third year on the varsity team. DeBus weighs only 171 pounds and plays the right guard posivi i; well, ranking us one of the oest ELMEtf HUbKA guards m ihe ctsv Linrnin ju-ni Big Six in spite of his diminutive size. OI late DeBus has been nursing an injury of his light leg and has lie.ni un able to uarticipate much in scrim mages. However he is expected to be in condition for the Cyclone game. Elmer Hubka. first string le serve last sea son who has been shifted to a center posi tion last week because ot his showing in the Texas game, will most likely see action at nnfor in tht game With the wbbem debus Iowa State Cy- '''"' Mn'n Journal clones this week end. Hubka plays mi excel!, nt defensive game. Trinior m nnn of h lone line f Ilubka s who have performed on the Nebraska gridiron. He is the younger brother of Ernie, who j played with the Scarlet and Cream , backfield in 1917, 1919 and 1920., Another brother, I.addie. played on the Husker line in 1923 and 12. ; PHI KAPPA PS1 LEAGUE j 3 CHAMP IN Wins Title Group by Virtue Of 2 to 0 Victory Over Alpha Gamma Rho. Phi Kappa Psl won the soccer jtrmmpionsnip oi 'u- y; the intramura; umint-.v y ins Alpha Gamma Rho 2 to 0 in the deciding game. In league on Sigma Chi assured ot a share n the title, as are Delta Sigma Ph. and Beta Theta in leagues two and four All three teams are unde feated but the undisputed cham pionships of the various groups are undecided. Wednesday will see !he tinal games played in league one. two ind three, while four has sched uled its last Friday. The university championships will be decided in the first three leagues Wednesday at 5:00 p. m., but the winner oi the last will not be determined un til Friday at 5:00. Results yesterday: Pht Kappa Pal a. Alpha Oamma Rho 0 Delta Sigma Lambda 4. ThJbi Phi forfeited to Delta Siftma PhU fl95 and 245 fj wax- i . W Wmiii O St. THE IPiWB I " X AT CENTER " &Z ' ' ' rl Wm mx f -'yl f THEA ELY PATES HIM :U-m,Skm: - -':.r-:ieif 'fWPT WE PLAYED A6AIMST - Courlfiiy Sunday Journal and Star. Franklin Meier is Nebraska's 1933 pivot man. He is tlie man Dicked by Bible to fill the position vacated by Lawrence Ely. He has been suggested for All A meiican this year by sports writers choos ing probable football star's. Meier is a product of Lincoln high. CALIFORNIANS OBJECT 10 Students of U. C. L. A. May Take Their Cases to Supreme Court. LOS ANGELES, Oct. 10. (CNSl. Controversy over compulsory mili tary training courses at the Uni versity of California at Los An geles this week broke forth again as the Board of Regents was scheduled to weigh the cases of two entering freshmen who re fused to enroll in R. O. T. C. classes. Should the board decide that "he students. Alonzo Reynolds, jr., IS, and Albert W. Hamilton, 19, should be expelled, the latter have Indicated that they will start legal action designed to bring about a decision of the state supreme court to settle their right to attend the university as "conscientious ob jectors" to military training. Attorney Offers Services. They are to be represented by John Beardsley. attorney, who will piepare their case in this event.. The .students declared that Beards ley has be-n retained on their be half by the Southern California Methodist conference, which, they stated, ha decided to make of theirs a test case which perhaps may settle once and for all the question of compulsory military training in publicly owned institu tions of higher learning. Hamilton is the son of the Rev. VV A. Hamilton, retired Methodist inini.scer and former chaplain at Joliet penitentiary, while Reynolds' lather is the Rev. Alonzr. Reynolds, sr.. of the Wiishire Community church in Los Angeles. Methodists Intervene. It was understood that repre sentatives of the Methodist clergy would file oetilions with the Board ol Regents, proiesung anj to dismiss the students, at the time their case was to be consid ered this week. Meanwhile, reports from the University of Oregon revealed an other outbreak of the controversy there, several freshmen having dis tributed handbills urging their classmates not to enroll for R O. T. C. As a result, the Daily Emerald at Oregon in an editorial, while taking no stand for or against militarism, protested the "spreading of propagandists ma terial which might discourage any student from taking courses insti tuted in the university's curricu lum." Daily Trojan Discusses Issue. Wendell Sether, editor of the Daily Trojan at the University of Southern California, however, took unie with this opinion, and in a ,mtpr editorial, which commenc ed on the situation tt n t. a nrl Oree;on, both at declared: "We ... agree wim cue Emerald in its statement that dis tribution of pamphlots to discour age students from enro ling in the R O T C is incompatible to the spirit of a university, but we will go further and add that comptil iory military training is also in consistent with the ideals ; on whi.h our higher institutions of learning t conclude with the sUtement that it is as incongruous to expel students because the r Pacifist ideals make it impossible for them to take military trata ng it would he to expel a Christian "cause he refused to take a course in Mohammedan religion. TYPEWRITERS All standard mae for rent, epexual rata tor lon term. Reconditioned bi chinea on easy terms. Nebraska Typewriter Co. 130 No. 1! St. BZ1S7 DAILY NEBRASKAN Meir Takes Ely's Place 1 ll ' PL President's Son Wants to Stand on His Own as Other CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (CNS). Franklin D. Roosevelt, jr., son of the president of the United States, this week had taken his place as one of approximately 1,000 fresh men at Harvard. "I want to be treated just as any Harvard freshman," he said earn estly. "I don't want anything spe cial' because I happen to be the son of the president. I want people to forget that so I can stand on my own." But despite this plea , Harvard police acted as his bodyguards while he registered in Memorial Hall along with other entrants and even in his quarters in Weld Hall, where he will room with his cousin. Cornelius Van Schaak Roosevelt, interviews or photographs were not permitted. Cornelius Roosevelt, who was a classmate of Franklin, jr., at Gro ton, is the grandson of former President Theodore Roosevelt and the son of Col. Theo. Roosevelt, jr., one time governor of the Philip pines. The first talk which Franklin jr., heard after being registered as a student of Harvard college was Erma Bauer, Harriet Duer, "Chosen by Activities Organization. A. W. S. freshmen activities group elected Erma Bauer presi dent, and Harriet Duer secretary at a meeting in Ellen Smith hall on Friday. Marian Smith, leader of the group, discussed the A. W. S. board's rules, emphasizing the ne cessity for their strict observance. She added that the rules could be made more strict but never more lax by organized houses. In explaining the business of the group, Miss Smith stated that it was an organization for the pur pose of discussing the various ac tivities on the campus, their mem bership requirements, and purpose. CAMBRIDGE, Mass. Oct. 10. (C. N. S. ) Harvard college at Harvard university has established a record in enrollment, administration offi cers announced this week. Total registration in the college now has reached 3,429, as compared with 3,361 last year and 3,233 two years ago. NEW YORK.. Oct 10. (C. N. S.) Late registrations were expected by enrolment officers this week to bring the total number of students up to or beyond the 36,987 mark of last year at Columbia univer sity. NEW YORK., Oct. 10. (C. N. S.I Students of New York university this week were invited to join a LaGuardia for Mayor club com posed entirely of undergrduates, graduates a..d administrative offi cers. A McKee for Mayor organi zation also was expected to be formed. BERKELEY. Calif., Oct. 11. (C. N. S.) Acceptance of 2.600 acres of forest land in El Dorado county, to be operated as a research tract for the general benefit of the lum ber industry, this week was an nounced by the University of Cali fornia. The tract is the gift of a lumber company. NE WORLEANS, Oct 11. (C. N. S.) An Einstein is registered at Tulane university. He is Robert Einstein, age 20, cousin of Profes sor Albert Einstein, and he has en rolled at Tulane to complr-te hi1' medical education which he Rtrtf In Germany but fliscnntinucd be cause of nazi practices. Harvard Students that given by Charles Francis Adams, member of the Harvard Board of Overseers and former sec retary of the navy, who addressed the freshmen. Quoting the late Dean Shaler of Harvard, he said: "It is a good plan not to make more of a damn fool of yourself than God Almighty intended you should." The dean used to telegraph this message to President Theodore Roosevelt when some action of the latter failed to meet with his ap proval, Adams said, and would sometimes follow it with a second wire, stating: "Theodore, you have not followed the plan." Adams warned the new first year men against taking it for granted that training at Harvard would give them "some vague superior ity" over their efllow men. President Franklin D. Roosevelt himself is a graduate of Harvard. While a student at the university he was editor of the Harvard Crim son, and much of his present as tuteness in matters involving the newspapers and newspapermen is attributed to this early training. Verna Reed, freshman at the University of Washington, made her first solo flight in an airplane at Boeing Field after only seven hours and fourteen minutes of in struction. If she can learn her English, economics and other sub jects as quickly, she should have plenty of leisure time. University of Washington Daily. Students at Stanford university are feeling the depression, as the number of tuition notes issued this year nearly equals that of last. Fewer undergraduate students have applied for them, however, though it is still too early for ac curate statistics to be compiled. The Stanford Daily. Because of a disagreement be tween two fraternities at the Uni versity of Washington regarding rushing rules, the Interfraternity Council may be turned over to the university administration. A spe cial prosecutor to curb the dis putes and all rushing complaints has been appointed. University of Washington Daily. The hotly contested rushing campaign on the Oregon State campus netted the various frater nities 219 new freshman pledges. Although this is a relatively small number compared to previous years, the amount is expected to increase considerably as the new men become acquainted with the houses. The turbulent waters of the up per Colorado river were conquered for the firs time by Harold H. Leitch, a Dartmouth graduate, who battled the 400 miles of foaming roaring waters in a small rubber boat. Professor Alfred Joy of Carne gie Institute, Pittsburgh, found that the earth is wlvrling about its star system at 9.0t0 miles per minute. Compared with the earth, thc fastest airplane travels only at a snail's pace. I We must get back to the truth that education is not training nor is it propaganda. - Dr. Robert E. i Vinson, president Western Reserve university. While the wicked flee when no man pursueth, they make much better time if some one is after them. Dr. Parkhurst. The student advisory commit to-; I is to start h (acuity contact proj I ect to arrange faculty '1 in help ing new st intents with r1" -sionm 'i:rilti-s ti University of Washington Daily. HUSKERS ARE RATED AS IMPRESSIVE TEAM Grantland Rice and George Kirksey Place Huskers Among Highest. IOWA, KANSAS LISTED Press association writers were consistent in choosing Nebraska among football teams having made impressive showings in early sea son games. Heading the list was Grantland Rice who listed Nebraska among fourteen outstanding teams. In cluded are Southern California, Michigan, Purdue, Ohio State, Carnegie Tech, Fordham, Stan ford, Army, Pittsburgh, Tennessee, Princeton and Columbia. United Press writers made the qualification even smaller. George Kirksey of the Chicago u.P. stated that football in the cornbelt hit a new height with Nebraska, Iowa and Kansas among the nation's gridiron leaders. C. W. "Doc Spears, who con ducts a column for the North American Newspaper Alliance also praised Nebraska, although claim' ing that he knew Texas would be beaten all the time. Said Spears 'Nebraska, as was expected, gave Texas a sound beating by virtue of a great day by Sauer, a great back. Nebraska looked good. COLLEGES AID IN NRA Survey by News Service Shows Whole-Hearted Cooperation. (CNS). College students thru out the country are co-operating wholeheartedly in President Franklin D. Roosevelt's national recovery program, a survey made by College News Service showed this week. In numerous campus student sponsored campaigns were under way to secure signatures to con sumers' pledge cards under the NRA, and at the University of Michigan, booths have been estab lished at various locations on the campus under the auspices of the Undergraduate council to iaciu tate the work of distributing pledge cards and consumers' NRA stickers. Similar campaigns were under way on many other campuses throughout the land, another no table example being Los Angeles IN THE BEST FASHION MANNER,., 5" ) a - Just Received! Jersey S1 MKT, W AKM riJ VI One and lira piece rin collar. leere figif fullne; quare neckline: striking trim contra!; delaiU. Navj, red, vine. brown. i-C THREE Junior College, whete Ltie Junior Collegian, student newspaper, sponsored the movement which re sulted in practically all of the in stitution a 4,500 students signing the pledge cards. WOMEN'S SOCCER STARTED Kappa Delta, Delta Gamma Win in First Round Tilts Monday. In the first games of the wom en's intramural soccer tournament Kappa Delta defeated Alpha Phi 13 to 6, and Delta Gamma de feated Pi Beta Phi 12 to 2. Twenty-one groups are entered in the tournament and the semi finals will be played the latter part of tne coming week. Students at Southwestern voled on their favorite magazines re cently. Cosmopolitan led, Willi Good Housekeeping running :i close second. Others with high rat ings were: The New Yorker, Col lege Humor, Current Events ind Detective Stories. The Indiana Daily Student. Oregon State Barometer. Indiana's away from home foot ball games this season will be por trayed to stay at home fans over the new grid-graph, an electric re producing board, which dramatic ally re-enacts a game play by play on a lighted screen. 5 Course Dinner DAILY 35c Fruit Cocktail or Soup Choice of T-Bone Steak 2 Pork Chops 2 Lamb Chops Pork Tenderloin A spa mans 'Tips Mashed Potatoes Shoe String Potatoes Coffee Tea Milk Dessert Choice of lee Cream or Pies Boyden Pharmacy 13th & P Sts., Stuart Bldg'. H. A. Reed, Mgr. tfoucie i. The new, tricky, con rcrtible collar coat The Russian coat ivilh fur border down front The classic mushroom collar coat The coat uith fur yoke and collar CARACUL AND WOLF TRIMMED in the newetl modes. Slaves villi tight cuffs and upper fullness. Silk linings and pood inter linings. Mostly black; some other colors, too. Iiowever. Coals designed in llie specifications suit ed to young misses and small persons sitet 11, 13, 15 and 17. 'In the coed's favorite . MISSES !HOP Second Flm.r 3 Pyjamas lor lounging. lor lounging, villi -.If aifo- JQ1 a quaint, cap V7 wide sashe; nixie und other dramatic gre, green and ; If i 20 r::li;!ce Se-li.n erond HMr. 3 r$50